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MIT set to release schools of robotic bass into ocean: lasers optional

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They blend right in.

CNN said:
(CNN) -- Schools of robotic fish could one day map the ocean floor, detect pollution or inspect and survey submerged boats or oil and gas pipelines, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology say.

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MIT engineers are showing off the latest generation of so-called robofish 15 years after they built the first one. The latest incarnation is sleeker, more streamlined and capable of mimicking the movements of a real fish.

And it's capable of exploring underwater terrain submersibles can't, said Pablo Valdivia Alvarado, a mechanical engineer at the school.

"Some of our sponsors were thinking of using them for inspection and surveillance," Alvarado said. "Since these prototypes are very cheap, the idea was to build hundreds -- 200, 500 -- and then just release them in a bay or at a port, and they would be roaming around taking measurements."

MIT researchers built their first robotic fish, "Robotuna," in 1994. But Robotuna has gone the way of the dinosaur. Alvarado said the new generation -- modeled after bass and trout -- cost only a few hundred dollars and have only 10 parts instead of the thousands used in Robotuna.


At five to 18 inches, the new fish is much smaller than Robotuna and built from a single, soft polymer. And unlike Robotuna, the fish is able to be released in the oceans.

"Most of the brains, the electronics, are embedded inside," said Alvarado, who designed the robofish with fellow MIT engineer Kamal Youcef-Toumi. "We have built prototypes with the battery inside, but for my experiments, for simplicity. We have a lot of prototypes that are simply tethered. We have a cable that runs out from the body and connects to a power supply."

The new generation has withstood harsh conditions in the lab, including two years of testing inside tanks filled with tap water, which is corrosive to standard robots, according to Alvarado, who says the Robotuna inspired him to take the technology to the next level.

The oil exploration company Schlumberger helped fund the research, but Alvarado says the U.S. Navy has also expressed interest in the robofish.

MIT's mechanical engineers are now turning their attention to new challenges: A robotic manta ray and a terrestrial robot in the form of a salamander.
 
...so what's the advantage to building these things to look like fish?

Something tells me that's going to cause problems more than it's helpful.
 
MaritalWheat said:
What happens when other fish try to eat them?
They become stronger and more powerful. Eventually uncontrollable shark-bots will roam the ocean, feasting on all the living. And then, they'll grow legs.
 
RubxQub said:
...so what's the advantage to building these things to look like fish?

Something tells me that's going to cause problems more than it's helpful.

The oil exploration company Schlumberger helped fund the research, but Alvarado says the U.S. Navy has also expressed interest in the robofish.

Stealth?

Nah, they´re just prototyping fish to later build a robotic Charcharodon megalodon. With lasers.
 
RubxQub said:
...so what's the advantage to building these things to look like fish?

Something tells me that's going to cause problems more than it's helpful.

Fish are pretty good at moving through water. It would be a waste of time to try and reinvent the wheel when evolution has done the job for us.

As far as them being eaten goes, I'm not so sure that would be too big an issue. They'd probably by targeted no matter what their general shape is, and losing a few big fish here and there because they eat a robot is no big deal.
 
Boonoo said:
Fish are pretty good at moving through water. It would be a waste of time to try and reinvent the wheel when evolution has done the job for us.

As far as them being eaten goes, I'm not so sure that would be too big an issue. They'd probably by targeted no matter what their general shape is, and losing a few big fish here and there because they eat a robot is no big deal.
I just keep picturing this scene where all these scientists and corporate heads are celebrating as the thing starts its underwater journey, then the feed cuts out as it's bit in half and everyone cries at how much money just got chomped by the bigger fish in the pond. :lol
But in reality it probably isn't a huge risk like you said, or at least something they haven't thought of.
 
Is it me or is the amount of robot news increasing? Or has there just been an increased robot bias to news?
 
So awesome.

I want a robot dog that is smart and also has lasers and stuff. It's the next logical step after a robot fish.

Tieno said:
Is it me or is the amount of robot news increasing? Or has there just been an increased robot bias to news?

It's singularity in effect. (That "robot bias" in the news is really just GAF's "robot bias.")
 
GDGF said:
How do they taste?
I can only imagine that anything that tries to eat one of these things is going to be pretty heavily damaged assuming they were strong enough to break it.
 
MaritalWheat said:
I just keep picturing this scene where all these scientists and corporate heads are celebrating as the thing starts its underwater journey, then the feed cuts out as it's bit in half and everyone cries at how much money just got chomped by the bigger fish in the pond. :lol
But in reality it probably isn't a huge risk like you said, or at least something they haven't thought of.

Not really an issue for them. Like the article said, they only cost a couple hundred dollars each to produce and they're creating a whole fleet of them
 
TheReal666 said:
i would like to know what type of power the would be using? because it cant be batteries or solar

What they should do is combine these with the EATR robots. Packs of hungry robot fish roaming the high seas!
 
You know the military is all over this...scale it up, replace its head with a "war"head, tell it to go find some subs...my god these things could rule the earth in time
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So we have robots that look like fish...a robot that runs like a dog...a robot that eats corpses for power...where is the sexy-time-bot....
 
GodofWine said:
So we have robots that look like fish...a robot that runs like a dog...a robot that eats corpses for power...where is the sexy-time-bot....
The robots will make them when it's time to kill us all.
 
lol yea what happens when other fish try to eat or mate with them? fishermen will get fucked over sometimes too.
 
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