Bouncing Robots Exploring Planets? 119
revision1_1 writes: "New bouncing robots could advance planetary exploration by leaps and bounds. The exploration of other planets could benefit from a giant leap for
robot-kind, according to researchers in New Mexico. Rather than use wheels or legs, robots could rove across alien landscapes far more effectively by bounding over the surface in an almost random fashion, they say." Well, science hasn't given me talking fruit and a jet pack yet, but this looks pretty close.
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:1)
If scientists were able to grow meat on trees, through the marvels of genetic engineering, would you eat that meat? After all, no animal had to die to provide it.
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:1)
No, we are not cut out to be 100% carnivores, but that isn't the point: We're omnivores. Get used to it.
Bell Aerosystems Rocketbelt (Score:1)
Invented by Bell Labs in the early 60's(?), and called the Rocketbelt, it could only maintain airborne for less than a minute, so you can imagine the altitude this puppy could get.
More info here [si.edu] and here [the-strange.com].
Tigger Mark One (Score:1)
Next we will have a fat honey-grubbing mars lander...
Re:Caution NASA at work (Score:1)
Re:this is really a good idea (Score:1)
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Re:How many grasshoppers were dissected to build i (Score:1)
How do you eat the animals if you don't kill them? They will really sit still for you that long? tee-hee
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Re:"Weebles" analogy has some holes (Score:1)
Excuse me, I have to go rummage in the closet, just might have some left.
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I suggest a new term (Score:1)
Realism, please. (Score:1)
Since the demise of the cold war, the US space program really hasn't gone very far. NASA needs some competition, or even better, should be privatized. I don't advocate pillaging everything or putting up a 500 mile wide McDonald's sign in space, but getting businesses to push ahead into space is what's really going to open up those frontiers.
For better or worse, it's the only way it's going to happen- we need to move off this rock and spread like a disease. I'm quite partial to humanity, versus the possibility of frozen bacteria on mars, or the like.
I guess I'm just species-ist. or whatever the word would be for that
Re:Are you insane? (Score:1)
Either that, or the french could test their nuclear missles there, since the south pacific is getting rather crowded these days...
Re:Are you insane? (Score:1)
or conversely, we could ship all those greenpeace activists there, and then let them test
Re:Blah. (Score:1)
While I realize there were drastic circumstances, it's still debatable if starting us on that course was better or worse in the long run.
that, and you seriously need to learn to cope with humour. sheesh.
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:1)
I also have no problems with being the one slaughtering the cows.
but to say "I don't *NEED* to eat meat, so therefore I *OUGHT* not to eat meat" ? that's an absolutely nonsensical viewpoint. If you are going to waste all of your short life on whining about things, pick something that actually makes a difference; help advance the human race. We're the top of the food chain, and I hate to break it to you but in the jungle animals don't all eat tofu. (although I'm sure you have a witty statement to make about how we should all eat tofu because we can.)
I still say you're a vegetable murderer.
dissapointing (Score:1)
Mars (Score:1)
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:1)
MEAT! I will have MEAT! NOW! NOW NOW NOW! Red, juicy! I WILL REND THE COW MYSELF!!
Oh, the carnage....
Wanted: Wanton acts of robotic appreciation (Score:1)
For, what is beauty without a viewer, even if only a mechanical one?
Does not the unobserved particle live in a confused superposition of quantum states without an observer to collapse them?
Nay, it is the selfish species self-hate of we pathetic humans that prevents us from delivering to as many planets as possible the rich, abundant delight of sapient appreciation.
Write to your Congressdroids today! Tell them in no uncertain terms that you will not accept any more delay in spreading our aegis over the entire Solar System!
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OffTopic: same site: "Flying Backpack drone" !!! (Score:1)
This is the Toy i want for Xmas -- with the X10 wireless cam!!!!
Here it is CmdrTaco... (Score:1)
Why do moderators do this to us? (Score:1)
Humans have evolved into omnivores, which means we have the necessary equipment to eat both meat and vegetable matter. If we were inherently vegetarians, we would have evolved the rest equipment that other vegetarian animals come with (a much longer intestinal tract and the ability to digest cellulose, to name a few). Our teeth are highly adapted (with sharp cutting incisors and tearing canines, alongside our crushing molars) to eating a variety of foodstuffs, as well.
Not to make light of the moral/health arguments for vegetarianism (for which they are many), we must at a minimum demand more rigor in our informed discussion of any topic. Of course, this slashdot topic has absolutely nothing to do with vegetarianism.
Re:Are you insane? (Score:1)
I do have to agree with you that having some exploration of Mars is much better than having none and that if these little bouncy things help us to do that then it's a good thing. However, I think that it's something that should be discussed. That's why I posted my thought here, and it did in fact lead to some discussion, so I got what I wanted. Thank you for your input.
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They're - They are
Their - Belonging to them
Re:You know what this means.. (Score:1)
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They're - They are
Their - Belonging to them
Re:Are you insane? (Score:1)
Re:Bouncing in a random pattern? (Score:1)
mov ax, 13h
int 10h
Re:Bouncing in a random pattern? (Score:1)
mov ax, 13h
int 10h
Re:Control (Score:1)
although i could be wrong.
How does it right itself? (Score:1)
"Weebles" analogy has some holes (Score:1)
Except Weebles didn't hop around like this.
Didn't some Weebles have arms? I always thought of them as walking forward on their hands and bottom.
Re:Bouncing in a random pattern? (Score:1)
Bouncing can be slow and controlled (Score:1)
Re:Are you insane? (Score:1)
Makes you wonder if there's some n-th dimensional being thinking, "Hmm, nobody's really using those first three dimensions. Maybe a hyperspatial bypass would be a good use..." :)
Re:You know what this means.. (Score:1)
Their Names... (Score:1)
*Boingie Boingie Boingie*
Nature beat us to it. (Score:1)
Personally I always thought a eight leg spider robot is a great design, especially if he can rotate his legs about their axes! Flip upside down? No problem! I'll just spin my legs over!
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Funny... (Score:1)
I figure a simple design that can jump, and aim before jumping could do fairly well at all aspects of the contest except for the fight. (It'd have to wait for an attacker to approach, then use itself as a projectile, so it'd get low aggression scores.)
Comic Relief (Score:1)
The potential for watching these things under the influence of alcohol is mind-boggling...
Littering on Mars (Score:1)
I'm an eco-terrorist myself, but one with common sense.
Andrew Borntreger
Re:Is this wise? (Score:1)
Yeah but beer cans aren't magnetic (Not anymore anyway). You could have those things hop within a sweeping electro magnet's range, and grab em all. I doubt being so small they transmit their findings back, they probably have to be picked up at some point..
Why not legs? (Score:1)
The programming could allow the thing to move in random directions, or can go into a semi-directed mode where coordinates are fed to it, and a path finding algorithm goes into effect to get it there.
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:1)
Re:Blah. (Score:1)
All kidding aside, why would mother Nature tell us that we don't need to eat meat to get by in life while giving us sharpened teeth to eat meat better? The point is not that we can live without eating meat; we could survive on fruit juice and vegetables, but do we *have* to?
I do frown upon senseless violence to animals (killing rabbits just to try out a new mascara or shampoo, when a cell experiment could work out just as well). But eating meat is a part of almost every human culture.
Re:Blah. (Score:1)
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:1)
That's a major problem (Score:1)
How is this different from what a satellite does? (Score:1)
It's funny, but, (Score:1)
What the... BOUNCING space probe robots??? (Score:1)
These bouncing probes might become a space hazard if we manage to populate planets. Astronauts in space suits might have to duck bouncing objects, else suffer the same fate as Homer Simpson in HOMER^3.
Re:Are you insane? (Score:1)
Re:Blah. (Score:1)
I have some news for you, which you might find somewhat suprising: the Neolithic happened about 10,000 years ago, and we haven't evolved since then. Whatever we are genetically adapted to doesn't matter, since we don't live in an environment remotely close to it. That environment no longer exists.
Paleolithic hunter-gatherers ate meat that they hunted themselves; these were wild animals that had very lean meat. And they ate tons upon tons of wild plants-- and a variety of plants that would absolutely shock you. The diets one might call "natural" are nothing like the dairy, cholesterol-filled, huge hunk of steak carnivor diet that you vegetarian-haters like to call "natural".
Re:Hopper or Hole Digger? (Score:1)
Re:Wow. Why hadn't anybody thought of this before? (Score:1)
why bound? (Score:1)
As already pointed out, crater and other hazards would send these robots to never-never land, so the area that is researched never covers areas beyond the hazards.
Wouldn't it make more sense to disperse several smaller shrapnel "robots" with a missle shot upward, with a controlled explosion above the surface sending the robots over a truer detailing of the circle in question.
The robots could be small, with no moving parts, just a hell of a cushioning system. Some other method would need to be devised for exploring cracks in the surface etc, and details would have to be worked out for this too...
Re:Control (Score:2)
Although, random bouncing can still eventually get you where you want to be. Another New Scientist article says the military is looking into this as an option to replace current anti-tank mines.
See, right now the U.S. refuses to sign with other countries in the anti-personnel mine ban. Reason, they are afraid of their anti-tank fields getting cleared.
But if the mines communicated with one another, they would start hopping around again once a path was cleared, stopping once the gap was filled.
Same researcher, same deal. Presumably the NASA bots would just keep hopping 'till they hit something useful. Still faster then crawling around, or getting stuck...
Hm. Perhaps a combination of the two. Crawling for precision maneuvering, hopping to avoid getting stuck, or to cover a lot of ground?
Weebles Wobble but they don't fall down! (Score:2)
These are the most expensive Weebles yet!
Prior Art will not allow any patents though.
Re:One small step for man... (Score:2)
Or is it "pronk"?
(According to Cat's Paws and Catapults [the name of the author escapes me at the moment], the name of the 'gait' ("gallop","trot",etc.) for a creature pushing upwards off of all four legs simultaneously is called 'pronk'. I wonder, would this apply to these robots, the pictures of which imply that they are 'one-legged'?)
NASA Relives Nation's Youth? (Score:2)
Weebles Wobble But They DON'T FALL DOWN!!!
Neato!
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Re:No! (Score:2)
Re:No! (Score:2)
What "natural" setting? In case you haven't noticed, there isn't much "nature" on Mars!
Concern for the enviroment stems from concerns about life, not about "pristine states". Earth's "pristine natural setting" is a planet with no life and not much in the way of free oxygen. Concerns about the condition of Mars are limited to how the inhabitants of Mars feels about that environment. As of right now, there aren't very many.
The universe doesn't give a damn!
(not to mention Mars is pretty big; if our robot was a nuclear bomb it still would have no particular effect on Mars!)
Blah. (Score:2)
How can you stand the torture? all those ears of corn screaming as they are ripped off their stalks.
I am proudly a meatatarian, and I wear fur. lots of it. even my underwear.
FUR- we evolved, they didn't. Sucks to be them. (tm)
Re:No! (Score:2)
Re:OffTopic: same site: "Flying Backpack drone" !! (Score:2)
Re:Wow. Why hadn't anybody thought of this before? (Score:2)
http://ravecentral.com/dambusters.html
Is this wise? (Score:2)
However, I'm not sure that it's really all that wise to be sending all kinds of junk all over Mars. Now instead of 1 little wheeled thing per mission we could have dozens of bouncing machines littering the planet. Just reminds me a little too much of finding Bud cans laying all over after a rodeo.
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They're - They are
Their - Belonging to them
Great weapon of painful death (Score:2)
Already been done... (Score:2)
A few of these I am sure are wandering the universe, bouncing among the planets.
Oh, and science has already brought you talking fruit. It is called LSD-25.
www.mp3.com/Undocumented [mp3.com]
Doesn't work for ALL terrain (Score:2)
There had better be a LOT of these things in each package to justify the overall cost of getting them to the surface of another planet and be willing to lose a few!
As far as fuel is concerned, would combustion be the best? Maybe a slightly slower process, each little guy would slowly charge a big capacitor with solar panels, then use up the stored charge in a big burst for a jump at a time.
Re:How many grasshoppers were dissected to build i (Score:2)
The only reason you have the luxury of being a vegetarian is because "modern" society has the means of bringing you the selection of vegetables from all over the world that you need to maintain your dietary needs. If you were part of a hunter/gatherer tribe, you'd eat meat or die of malnutrition.
Meat represents CONCENTRATED nutrition - nutrition which has been gathered, refined & stored in a high-calorie, high-protein form through biology - if humans didn't eat meat, there isn't a chance in hell that humans would have made it out of the tree-swinging stage.
It's fairly well-known that it is possible for a human in very good shape to run down (and kill from exhaustion) a horse, over some period of time (I think it was at least a few days). The _reason_ that a human can do that, is because they can scarf down in a couple minutes the same calories & nutrients (relative to body size) that it takes the horse HOURS to eat. And the human is NOT getting that energy by scarfing down lettuce!
Re:Bouncing in a random pattern? (Score:2)
Re:How many grasshoppers were dissected to build i (Score:2)
I'm not sure I can find a web reference though, so you can call me an idiot and feel pretty comfortable about not being proven wrong
Re:Blah. (Score:2)
Our digestive system is not that of a carnivore that needs meat. We have the digestive system of an omnivore that can eat almost everything, but eats mostly a vegetarian diet.
In most societies, eating meat is a rarity. Even in western society, eating meat used to be a rarity, limited mostly to special occaisions. Historically, however, it was found that sub groups which consciously decided to go with a pure vegetarian diet have tended to live longer than their more carniverous relatives.
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The process that got me to go from carnivore to vegetarian was an understanding of how much resources it takes to create meat. With the resources devoted to a heavily carniverous diet, we could probably feed a dozen vegetarians quite well.
Once I switched to a vegetarian diet, I also found that my digestive system would be generally stressed when I ate meat -- although there is some reason to believe that much of that stress may due to the heavily chemical upbringing of farmed meat.
`ø,,ø`ø,,ø!
Caution NASA at work (Score:2)
"Fast, Cheap, and Out Of Control" - Sterling (Score:2)
Yes, one or two might fall down crevases. So what. Get a bunch of 'em.
RoboWars and other applications of the same idea (Score:2)
Now if only NASA could build its robots on something closer to a RoboWars budget...
...and just what kindof... (Score:2)
Most will survive (Score:2)
I think the idea is to have lots of these things running around because they're so cheap. Sure some will get stuck or destroyed, but the majority will survive. You can see from this picture [darpa.mil] how small (check out the size of the chips relative to the overall size) and inexpensive it must be.
Robots on caffiene (Score:2)
Control (Score:2)
Re:Bouncing in a random pattern? (Score:2)
Now that would be super-cool to witness. Mechanical 'grasshopper' search teams bouncing around your backyard. I wonder if that 10 meter estimate is in the moons gravity or mars or earth or what...
Re:Blah. (Score:2)
I have some news for you, which you might find somewhat suprising: the Neolithic happened about 10,000 years ago, and we haven't evolved since then.
Well, judging from the quality of some posts here on Slashdot, some people are closer to the Neolithic than others. But I disgress. We have evolved since then, if only in small changes. Like losing a few back teeth, shape of the foreheads, things like that.
Whatever we are genetically adapted to doesn't matter, since we don't live in an environment remotely close to it. That environment no longer exists.Oh, really? So the masai in Africa or the aborigines in Australia live in environments so dissimilar to those 10k years ago? I'll grant you that civilized societies (let's skip the usual arguments over civilization and culture) change the way they regard to nature. But step outside of a city, and you'll see the same environment that has been around for ages. All we do is take a little piece of civilized environment with us while we go outside.
and a variety of plants that would absolutely shock you.
No! Don't tell me they ate... green stuff that grows from the ground! Or colored stuff that hangs from green tall things! Oh, the humanity! The horror! The un-civilized behavior of those poor primitive savages!
There, I was shocked. Did that come out ok? I do need to practice my acting skills.
The diets one might call "natural" are nothing like the dairy, cholesterol-filled, huge hunk of steak carnivor diet that you vegetarian-haters like to call "natural".
*Turns around, looking for a vegetarian-hater* Nope, no such animal around here. Please excuse me if by writing what I thought anyone got the impression that I hate vegetarians. I dont. I have vegetarian friends. I just don't share their ideas.
And you're right. Filling up with cholesterol is not my idea of healthy living. I'd rather be like the japanese and eat more fish instead of steaks and pork.
jet pack (Score:2)
Wear a gold hat too.. (Score:2)
Then wear the gold hat, if that will move her;
If you can bounce high, bounce for her too,
Till she cry "Lover, gold-hatted, high-bouncing lover,
I must have you!"
Bouncing robots exploring other planets -- and Rob's complaining that he doesn't have talking fruit!?!
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Re:Are you kidding? (OT) (Score:2)
Really? I mean, really really? If we are herbivores, then, why the heck don't we have fermenting vats in our stomachs? Last I checked, humans were omnivores, a type of animal that is biologically equipped to eat both plants and animals. Omnivores. Yes, we're not carnivores; for crying out loud, though, we're certainly not herbivores. Stating such is pure rhetoric, and whatever scientific evidence is used to back said rhetoric is carefully picked from context, massaged, and paraphrased so as to conform to the ideological goal rather than actually prove it. The Vegitarian Resource Group has a good short article posted here [vrg.org] that goes into a bit more depth on the science of the matter.
Besides, my point wasn't one of material necessity but of moral obligation. You don't *need* to eat meat; therefore, you *ought* not eat meat.
Much like how since we don't *need* to have premarital sex, we *ought* not have premarital sex, no? Your morality != my morality. I, for one, happen to really, really like things like Tandoori Chicken and Beef Bourguignon. You'll have to pry my fork out of my cold, dead hands before I'll stop eating such things. I also maintain a diet high in veggies, since I know that eating veggies is healthy for me, and while I do enjoy eating meat, I do so in moderation, since I know that eating too much can be bad for my health (much like the glass of wine I have with dinner.)
How, though, do you see killing and eating one form of life as opposed to killing an eating another form of life as being more or less just or moral? For non photo-synthetic lifeforms here on earth, it is NECESSARY to kill and consume other life forms to survive. Killing and consuming plants still involves the premature termination of a living creature for the sake of your continued survival (unless, of course, you only eat plants that have died of natural causes after completing their entire life cycle, which I doubt that is the case.) If your morality dictates that you should not eat animals because their life is more valuable than that of plants, I understand and respect your views, even if I do not share them; it certainly is much easier to ignore the fact that you're stealing the life of something else to continue your own when it doesn't flee, thrash, and bleed when killed. But don't expect me to feel the least bit guilty or morally depraved for eating meat; my life is built entirely off the sacrifice of countless other lives, both plant and animal, and I can accept that fact without remorse.
Wow. Why hadn't anybody thought of this before? (Score:2)
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:2)
It's for "exploration" (Score:2)
Robinett realised that this somewhat chaotic approach to navigation was a very cheap and effective way of getting about, compared to the complicated planning that most robots need to move.
"We're just very used to wheels and complete control."
It's for rapidly getting around the planet and covering as much area as possible, figuring out where the really interesting parts are, and then perhaps later sending back a precision probe for more careful analysis.
Ruggedness Required (Score:2)
You know what this means.. (Score:3)
Boing.. boing.. boing..
Hopefully these planets will have ladders randomly placed everywhere.
Programming (Score:3)
That would be very hard to debug, IMO (Score:3)
Distributed robotics for the Defense Department (Score:3)
See the Center for Distributed Robotics website [umn.edu] for lots of info, demos [umn.edu], etc. Or read this article [umn.edu] from the UMN CS Dept Newsletter featuring this project.
This reminds me (Score:3)
Greenpeace? (Score:3)
Greenpeace in Mars. Hmm. Would that make them Redpeace? Besides, we all know that Mars, that so-calledd "planet", has to be preserved in its pristine natural setting until we arrive in hordes, build MarsDisney themeparks and eat Earth chocolate bars.
Are you kidding? (Score:3)
We have neither the sharpened teeth nor the intestinal infrastructure necessary to be meat eaters. Besides, my point wasn't one of material necessity but of moral obligation. You don't *need* to eat meat; therefore, you *ought* not eat meat.
But eating meat is a part of almost every human culture.
I do frown upon senseless violence to animals
Then don't kill them and eat their little bodies. It's entirely senseless.
So's spousal abuse. Social prevalence does not make it anything more than just popular. People like beating their spouses and they like eating their meat. It doesn't help your point.
Time to send space probes out in pairs again? (Score:4)
Just like the Viking missions, two spacecraft give you two chances to succeed. They are launched at different times, in slightly different orbits. The arrival times are usually set to be a couple of weeks apart, mostly because of limited ground crew resources.
If there had been two such Mars probes, after the first one crashed there might have been enough time to diagnose the bug and upload a fix before the second one arrived.
Also, two probes do not cost twice as much as one. Only the launch costs are duplicated. The R&D costs are the same, and the money needed to build two one-off engineering prototypes (the probes) is less than twice that for building one.
Ob disclaimer: I realize that some persistent defects in two mechanically and electrically similar probes will fail in the same way, and may very well not be fixable from the ground. But, that's no reason not to try.
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Picture (Score:4)
Hopper or Hole Digger? (Score:4)
First off, this sounds like a really interesting approach! It seems, at first, that it would go a long way to avoid problems with surface obstructions (e.g. large rocks).
But, on further thought, can you imagine one of these things trying to hop out of a valley of loose sand? Sand gets kicked around, all right, but it'd be just digging itself in deeper and deeper! (It'd be even worse in an area where there was mud or a pond, but there's not too much of that on the moon <grin> and doubtful there'd be much on Mars.)
Sure, you could make a larger "base". That is, the part that gets thrust against the surface. But, then there's another issue. From the article:
If you made the base larger, how would you make sure that it was on the bottom?
Maybe a larger, birdcage-like superstructure? That might make it roll back into the proper orientation, but it would also add to the weight of the hopper and lessen its range. Further, it would risk the possibility of it getting mired in a crater:
Same kinds of problems if it should land in a narrow ravine... it could hop itself right across to the other side of the ravine and imbed itself in that wall.
I'd like to think they've considered these problems, but I saw no mention of them in the article. Any other ideas on potential problems and their solutions?
Are you insane? (Score:4)
That sounds like environmentalism taken quite a bit too far. That is almost as bad as the people who think we shouldn't colonize mars because "we'll just ruin it like we ruined earth". Nevermind that there's nothing on Mars to be ruined. No evidence of life, just thousands of acres of dust.
If bouncing "litter" helps us one little bit in exploring mars, I say go for it. Mars isn't doing us any good just sitting there, all pristine.
Wanton acts of robotic destruction (Score:4)
One small step for man... (Score:5)