Animal

With Falcon-Like Claws, This Aerial Drone Can Land, Grip and Perch on Branches

The quadrocopter was also able to catch objects tossed by researchers, such as bean bags and tennis balls

A 3-d printed robot with plastic grasping feet and four propeller blades grasps and tree branch

The quadrocopter dubbed “SNAG” has feet and legs modeled after a peregrine falcon William Roderick via Stanford University

A new drone is taking inspiration from nature’s best flyers: birds. The bio-inspired aerial bot, which was developed by Stanford engineers, combines four sets of propellers on top with a set of bird-like features below, such as grasping claws and bending legs that allow it to land smoothly almost anywhere.

“It’s not easy to mimic how birds fly and perch,” says Stanford mechanical engineer William Roderick, who co-authored the study, in a statement. “After millions of years of evolution, they make takeoff and landing look so easy, even among all of the complexity and variability of the tree branches you would find in a forest.”

While flying robots can skillfully navigate the skies, they haven’t aced landing, per Matt Simon for Wired. The four-propeller drones called “quadrocopters” are likely to topple over on any uneven surface. By contrast, birds can perch on just about anything—despite the wide variety of sizes, shapes, and textures of tree branches.

“Everything is a landing strip for a bird,” says study co-author David Lentink, a biologist and roboticist at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, to Wired. “To us, this is really inspiring: The whole idea that if you would just design different landing gear, you might be able to perch just anywhere.”

The research, which was published this week in Science Robotics, comes after years of studying the mechanics of bird perching and other animal-inspired flying robots. The final creation requires minimal computational power from its control board, which allows new features and equipment to be incorporated in future versions, reports Margo Milanowski for Popular Science. The development team dubbed the bird-inspired drone Stereotyped Nature-Inspired Aerial Grasper, or SNAG.

The one-and-a-half-pound quadrocopter, which has feet and legs modeled after a peregrine falcon, can catch and carry objects ten times its own weight. SNAG combines 3D-printed plastic “bones” with motors and fishing line that act like muscles and tendons.

Scientists tested SNAG’s performance in both a lab and in a forested environment, launching the bot at different tree branches. They found that the drone was able to catch objects tossed by researchers, such as a bean bag and tennis ball, reports George Dvorsky for GizmodoOne of SNAG’s current limitations is that it isn’t autonomous: a pilot had to remote-control the robot. But Lentink, Roderick, and their colleagues are already working on a way for the robot to spot a branch, determine how to approach it, and execute the landing on its own.

The research team hopes the aerial bot could help gather information about wildlife, conduct search and rescue missions, and gather data about an environment. SNAG has already been taking temperature and humidity measurements in a remote Oregon forest using onboard sensors.

“Part of the underlying motivation of this work was to create tools that we can use to study the natural world,” Roderick said in a statement. “If we could have a robot that could act like a bird, that could unlock completely new ways of studying the environment.”

 

s s

Related Posts

Snack-Happy Elephants Reach Out To Gorge Themselves On Sugar Cane When Their Open-Top Trailers Stop At A Junction Next To A Lorry Full Of The Crop

A couple of opportunistic elephants gorged themselves on sugar cane when their truck stopped next to the tasty treats at a busy junction. The giants of the animal…

Incredible moment vets save mother elephant’s life in front of her worried calf by jumping up and down on her to give CPR after pulling the pair out of a drain in Thailand

This is the inspiring moment a mother elephant was saved when vets conducted CPR by leaping up and down on her chest as her young daughter watched on….

Tourists stuck in their hatchback as a.morous elephant gets frisky on South African safari

This is the moment a bull elephant on musth – when its testosterone levels can reach 60 times greater than normal – decided to get closely acquainted with…

‘World’s loneliest elephant’ who has been kept in a tiny enclosure in Pakistan zoo for 35 years will finally be allowed to leave after campaign by animal welfare activists

An elephant kept alone in a tiny enclosure in a Pakistani zoo will be allowed to leave after a campaign by animal welfare activists helped ensure him better…

Un intrépido osezno de cuatro meses alcanza nuevas alturas y el corazón de su madre

En este conmovedor vídeo, te presentamos a un enérgico osezno de cuatro meses cuyo espíritu intrépido no conoce límites. Mira cómo este pequeño osito aventurero sube sin miedo…

Adorables cachorros de león convierten la sabana en su patio de juegos

En el corazón de la sabana salvaje, se desarrolla un espectáculo encantador cuando una manada de cachorros de león se embarca en una aventura lúdica. Estos pequeños bultos…