Robot News from RoboDaily.com
July 04, 2018
ROCKET SCIENCE
'Flying brain' blasts off on cargo ship toward space station



Tampa (AFP) June 29, 2018
A ball-shaped artificial intelligence robot nicknamed the "flying brain" because it is trained to follow and interact with a German astronaut blasted off Friday toward the International Space Station aboard SpaceX's Dragon cargo ship. A spare hand for the station's robotic arm, an experiment to measure plant stress and a study of a new cancer treatment were also on board as the Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Florida at 5:42 am (0942 GMT). "We have ignition and liftoff! The Falco ... read more

ROBO SPACE
Rough terrain? No problem for beaver-inspired autonomous robot
Buffalo NY (SPX) Jul 04, 2018
Autonomous robots excel in factories and other manmade spaces, but they struggle with the randomness of nature. To help these machines overcome uneven terrain and other obstacles, University a ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Low-cost prosthetic foot mimics natural walking
Boston MA (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Prosthetic limb technology has advanced by leaps and bounds, giving amputees a range of bionic options, including artificial knees controlled by microchips, sensor-laden feet driven by artificial in ... more
ROBO SPACE
Next-generation robotic cockroach can explore under water environments
Boston MA (SPX) Jul 04, 2018
In nature, cockroaches can survive underwater for up to 30 minutes. Now, a robotic cockroach can do even better. Harvard's Ambulatory Microrobot, known as HAMR, can walk on land, swim on the surface ... more
ROBO SPACE
Activity simulator could eventually teach robots tasks like making coffee or setting the table
Boston MA (SPX) Jun 26, 2018
For many people, household chores are a dreaded, inescapable part of life that we often put off or do with little care - but what if a robot maid could help lighten the load? Recently, compute ... more
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ROBO SPACE
'Flying brain' designed to follow German astronaut launches Friday
Tampa (AFP) June 28, 2018
A floating, ball-shaped, artificial intelligence robot, specially trained to follow around a German astronaut at the International Space Station, is scheduled to blast off Friday on its ground-breaking mission. ... more
ROBO SPACE
SNU researchers developed electronic skins that wirelessly activate fully soft robots
Seoul, South Korea (SPX) Jun 25, 2018
A research team of Seoul National University (Co-senior authors: Professor Yongtaek Hong, Jaeha Kim, and Kyu-Jin Cho) has developed a skin-like electronic system that is soft, thin, lightweight and ... more
ROBO SPACE
Robotic Refueling Mission 3 completes crucial series of tests
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jun 26, 2018
Space exploration has captured our attention for over half of a century. NASA plans to propel human spaceflight beyond low-Earth orbit and continue the legacy of the Apollo missions. With a re ... more
MOON DAILY
NASA will seek partnership with US Industry to develop lunar gateway
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 25, 2018
As part of the agency's Exploration Campaign, NASA's Gateway will become the orbital outpost for robotic and human exploration operations in deep space. Built with commercial and international partn ... more
ROBO SPACE
Rutgers researchers develop automated robotic device for faster blood testing
New Brunswick NJ (SPX) Jun 22, 2018
Rutgers researchers have created an automated blood drawing and testing device that provides rapid results, potentially improving the workflow in hospitals and other health-related institutions to a ... more
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WATER WORLD
NASA, NSF plunge into ocean twilight zone to explore ecosystem carbon flow
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 22, 2018
A large multidisciplinary team of scientists, equipped with advanced underwater robotics and an array of analytical instrumentation, will set sail for the northeastern Pacific Ocean this August. ... more
TECH SPACE
Shapeshifting minibots printed with 3-D 'ink'
Paris (AFP) June 13, 2018
Engineers have created a soft, malleable 3-D "ink" to print devices that can roll, jump, even grasp objects at the wave of a magnet, they said on Wednesday. ... more
ROBO SPACE
Robots learn by checking in on team members
Thuwal, Saudi Arabia (SPX) Jun 19, 2018
The software and hardware needed to co-ordinate a team of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) that can communicate and work toward a common goal have recently been developed by KAUST researchers. ... more
ROBO SPACE
Future robots need no motors
Hong Kong (SPX) Jun 19, 2018
To develop micro- and biomimetic-robots, artificial muscles and medical devices, actuating materials that can reversibly change their volume under various stimuli are researched in the past thirty y ... more
ROBO SPACE
A fast, low-voltage actuator for soft and wearable robotics
Santa Barbara CA (SPX) Jun 18, 2018
In the world of robotics, soft robots are the new kids on the block. The unique capabilities of these automata are to bend, deform, stretch, twist or squeeze in all the ways that conventional rigid ... more


'iPal' robot companion for China's lonely children

ROBO SPACE
Cometh the cyborg: improved integration of living muscles into robots
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Jun 12, 2018
The new field of biohybrid robotics involves the use of living tissue within robots, rather than just metal and plastic. Muscle is one potential key component of such robots, providing the driving f ... more
Robotics News from RoboDaily.com

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ROBO SPACE
C2-A2 AGRODROID the world's new Smart Farming product
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Jun 12, 2018
European software developer 'Cognitive Technologies' has developed the world's first industrial agrodroid for international agricultural market. Cognitive Technologies - one of the top develop ... more
ROBO SPACE
Self-healing material a breakthrough for bio-inspired robotics
Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Jun 12, 2018
Many natural organisms have the ability to repair themselves. Now, manufactured machines will be able to mimic this property. In findings published this week in Nature Materials, researchers at Carn ... more
CAR TECH
New Tesla software to offer 'full' autonomy, Musk says
Washington (AFP) June 11, 2018
An update to Tesla's Autopilot software coming in August will enable "full self-driving features" for the automaker's electric cars, chief executive Elon Musk says. ... more
ROBO SPACE
Future robots need no motors
Hong Kong (SPX) Jun 11, 2018
To develop micro- and biomimetic-robots, artificial muscles and medical devices, actuating materials that can reversibly change their volume under various stimuli are researched in the past thirty y ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
New NASA position to focus on exploration of Moon, Mars and worlds beyond
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 13, 2018
NASA's Science Mission Directorate (SMD) is taking a giant leap focusing the agency's exploration of the Moon, Mars and our Solar System. Effective immediately, Steve Clarke is SMD's Deputy As ... more
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Navy contracts Raytheon for LOCUST prototype
Washington (UPI) Jun 27, 2018
Raytheon Co. has been awarded a contract to produce a Low Cost UAV Swarming Technology, or LOCUST, Innovative Naval Prototype. The deal, announced by the Navy Tuesday, comes under a $29 million cost-plus-fixed-fee contract for the LOCUST Innovative Naval Prototype. Work will be performed in Tucson, Arizona, and is expected to be completed by Jan. 25, 2020. LOCUST can launc ... more
+ Facebook halts production of drones for internet delivery
+ Australia buys high-tech drones to monitor South China Sea, Pacific
+ Israel fires at drone from Syria, forces retreat
+ Pentagon contracts for 'surge support' for MQ-9 Reaper drones
+ Chip upgrade helps miniature drones navigate
+ NASA flies large unmanned aircraft in public airspace without chase plane for first time
+ General Atomics to upgrade radar on Reaper drones
Clearing out space junk, one step at a time
Toulouse, France (SPX) Jun 26, 2018
Since the start of the space age, mankind has left its mark on the orbital pathways overhead...and not always for the better. Today, some 7,000 tonnes of artificial debris - a mass equivalent to the Eiffel Tower - orbit the planet. This detritus, ranging from remnants of defunct or broken-up spacecraft to discarded rocket stages, whizzes by at a dizzying 8 km per second - a speed at which ... more
+ Smarter, faster algorithm cuts number of steps to solve problems
+ New, safer waterproof coating invented by MIT scientists
+ Probing nobelium with laser light
+ Hope for new catalysts with high activity
+ Electronic skin stretched to new limits
+ Scientists use a photonic quantum simulator to make virtual movies of molecules vibrating
+ Indian Space Agency to teach foreign students how to build satellites


Ultimate precision for sensor technology using qubits and machine learning
Helsinki, Finland (SPX) Jul 04, 2018
There are limits to how accurately you can measure things. Think of an X-ray image: it is likely quite blurry and something only an expert physician can interpret properly. The contrast between different tissues is rather poor but could be improved by longer exposure times, higher intensity, or by taking several images and overlapping them. But there are considerable limitations: humans can safe ... more
+ This is what a stretchy circuit looks like
+ Silicon provides means to control quantum bits for faster algorithms
+ Rare element to provide better material for high-speed electronics
+ Less is more when it comes to predicting molecules' conductivity
+ The right squeeze for quantum computing
+ Molecular switch will facilitate the development of pioneering electro-optical devices
+ Carbon nanotube optics provide optical-based quantum cryptography and quantum computing
Greenpeace activists 'crash' drone into French nuclear plant
Lyon (AFP) July 3, 2018
Greenpeace activists said Tuesday they had flown a drone fitted out as a flying Superman into a nuclear energy plant in southeast France, aiming to show how the country's reactors are vulnerable to terror attacks. A video released by the environmental group shows the drone zipping through restricted airspace above the Bugey plant about 25 kilometres (16 miles) outside Lyon before crashing in ... more
+ The vanishing nuclear industry
+ Japan aims for 24% renewable energy but keeps nuclear central
+ Electrospun sodium titanate speeds up the purification of nuclear waste water
+ Framatome welcomes Taishan 1 grid connection, the first EPR reactor in the world
+ First EPR nuclear reactor goes on stream in China
+ The power to transform the industry
+ Chernobyl's stray dogs offered new life in US
Building a chemical weapons detector with Legos
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 28, 2018
Nerve agents are scary stuff. They are among the most deadly substances on earth, yet can be odorless, tasteless and difficult to detect. But researchers now report in ACS Central Science that they have adapted building materials normally associated with children's toys and a cell phone to help sense these compounds. The new method can sensitively detect these poisons, quantify the amount and di ... more
+ IS threatens to execute 6 Iraqis unless women prisoners freed
+ Russia says OPCW preparing 'pseudo' report on Syria chemical attacks
+ Iraqi refugee held in France on suspicion of IS 'war crimes'
+ Algerian ex-defence chief can face war crime charges: Swiss court
+ French police seek clues after Chechen-born knifeman strikes Paris
+ Trudeau aims for G7 to pick up fight against extreme nationalism
+ Pentagon probe finds training, command issues in Niger ambush
Path to zero emissions starts out easy, but gets steep
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Carbon dioxide emissions from human activities must approach zero within several decades to avoid risking grave damage from the effects of climate change. This will require creativity and innovation, because some types of industrial sources of atmospheric carbon lack affordable emissions-free substitutes, according to a new paper in Science from team of experts led by University of California Ir ... more
+ Green electricity isn't enough to curb global warming
+ European Commission: Luxembourg tax laws benefited ENGIE
+ Hong Kong consortium makes $9.8 bn bid for Australia's APA
+ 'Carbon bubble' coming that could wipe trillions from the global economy
+ Trump readies new plan to aid coal and nuclear power
+ Carbon dioxide emissions drop from U.S. power sector
+ Study highlights environmental cost of tearing down Vancouver's single-family homes


Atomic movie of melting gold could help design materials for future fusion reactors
Menlo Park CA (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Researchers at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have recorded the most detailed atomic movie of gold melting after being blasted by laser light. The insights they gained into how metals liquefy have potential to aid the development of fusion power reactors, steel processing plants, spacecraft and other applications where materials have to withstand extreme conditio ... more
+ Buildings as power stations - data shows they work: They generate more energy than they consume
+ New experimental results from the largest and most sophisticated stellerator
+ Paving the way for safer, smaller batteries and fuel cells
+ Turbocharge for lithium batteries
+ Sodium- and potassium-based batteries hold promise for cheap energy storage
+ The first experimental discovery in the world of the propagation of plasma turbulence
+ Rutgers-led research could lead to more efficient electronics
China Rising as Major Space Power
Beijing (XNA) Jul 02, 2018
China is fast becoming a major space power as both its technology and launching frequency of satellites are improving at a rapid rate. China became the world's fifth country to send a satellite into space in 1970. So far, a total of 400 satellites have been launched and over 200 are currently in service. A large family of satellites has been formed in China, covering the fields of co ... more
+ China launches new-tech experiment twin satellites
+ China confirms reception of data from Gaofen-6 satellite
+ Experts Explain How China Is Opening International Space Cooperation
+ Beijing welcomes use of Chinese space station by all UN Nations
+ China upgrades spacecraft reentry and descent technology
+ China develops wireless systems for rockets
+ China's Queqiao satellite carries "large umbrella" into deep space


NanoRacks Brings 40 Students Experiments to Space Station, New Commercial Customers
Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Early this morning, Dragon, the spacecraft from the fifteenth SpaceX contracted resupply mission, berthed with the International Space Station carrying one of NanoRacks' largest educational missions to date. In addition to launching 40 student experiments, NanoRacks has also introduced a new commercial company and ongoing professional research into the commercial low-Earth orbit ecosystem. ... more
+ NASA seeks new ways to handle trash for deep space missions
+ US Asks Russia to Fix Its Broken Toilet on ISS
+ It's in the blood: guiding rafts down Poland's mountain gorge
+ NASA leverages public and private partnerships for space science with AI boost
+ New head of 'space nation' aims for the stars
+ Hague, Ovchinin talk ISS mission during presser
+ Deep space navigation: tool tested as emergency navigation device
Top 10 Teams Selected in Virtual Model Stage of NASA's 3D-Printed Habitat Challenge
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
NASA's 3D-Printed Habitat Challenge is challenging teams of citizen inventors to push the state of the art of additive construction to design and build sustainable shelters for humans to live on Mars. Previous levels of the challenge have resulted in advanced habitat concepts, material compositions and printing technologies. The current stage (Phase 3: Level 1) of the multi-level contest c ... more
+ Mars valleys traced back to precipitation
+ The meteorite 'Black Beauty' expands the window for when life might have existed on Mars
+ Precipitation explains Mars' fluvial patterns, astronomers claim
+ Opportunity sleeps during a planet-encircling dust storm
+ Martian Dust Storm Grows Global; Curiosity Captures Photos of Thickening Haze
+ Explosive volcanoes spawned mysterious Martian rock formation
+ Unique microbe could thrive on Mars, help future manned missions


China to develop new series of carrier rockets: expert
Beijing (XNA) Jul 03, 2018
China aims to develop a new series of small, medium, large and heavy-lift Long March carrier rockets by 2030 to meet the demands of its space operations, according to an expert. The capacity of Chinese rockets would reach 140 tonnes for low-Earth orbit, 44 tonnes for Earth-Mars transfer orbit, 50 tonnes for Earth-Moon transfer orbit and 66 tonnes for geosynchronous transfer orbit in 2030, ... more
+ Dragon Now Installed To Station For Month-Long Stay
+ Dragon delivers some ICE
+ 'Flying brain' blasts off on cargo ship toward space station
+ Dawn's Engines Complete Firing, Science Continues
+ Maverick entrepreneur's space rocket fails at blast off
+ The rockets that are pushing the boundaries of space travel
+ Looking to the Future with Ariane 6 and Vega C Launchers for Asia-Pacific Customers
Seattle bans plastic straws, but US still has a long way to go
Washington (AFP) July 3, 2018
Seattle has become the first major US city to ban plastic straws and utensils in its eateries, a victory for environmentalists that will be tough to replicate elsewhere in the United States. After targeting plastic bags, environmentalists have set their sights on plastic drinking straws as a public enemy, highlighting the gap between their brief moment of utility and the enduring impact they ... more
+ Air pollution plays significant role in diabetes: study
+ War on plastic leaves manufacturers clutching at straws
+ Mounting allegations against environment chief trouble White House
+ Romania asks UNESCO to delay decision on gold mining region
+ Last straw for McDonald's, Burger King in Mumbai plastic ban
+ Understanding the formation of chemical byproducts during water treatment
+ Environment the loser in Gabon capital's rush for growth


Lyft pushes into bikes with new acquisition
San Francisco (AFP) July 2, 2018
US ridesharing giant Lyft said Monday it was acquiring bikesharing operator Motivate as it ramps up efforts against rival Uber in alternative forms of transportation. Terms of the deal were not announced for Motivate, which operates bike programs in New York, Boston, San Francisco, Washington and elsewhere. "Lyft and Motivate have both been committed for years to the same goal of reducin ... more
+ Strict new emissions tests disrupt Volkswagen production
+ Volkswagen to stash cars at Berlin's problem airport
+ Lyft value jumps to $15.1 billion in new funding round
+ First investor complaint filed against Daimler over 'dieselgate'
+ China's Didi steps up challenge to Uber with Australia push
+ New tool will help protect animals from harmful hues of transport lights
+ Electric scooter-sharing moves into the fast lane
Squeezing light at the nanoscale
Boston MA (SPX) Jun 18, 2018
Researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have developed a new technique to squeeze infrared light into ultra-confined spaces, generating an intense, nanoscale antenna that could be used to detect single biomolecules. The researchers harnessed the power of polaritons, particles that blur the distinction between light and matter. This ultra ... more
+ A new way to measure energy in microscopic machines
+ AI-based method could speed development of specialized nanoparticles
+ Researchers use magnets to move tiny DNA-based nano-devices
+ Atomically thin nanowires convert heat to electricity more efficiently
+ Change the face of nanoparticles and you'll rule chemistry
+ Novel method to fabricate nanoribbons from speeding nano droplets
+ Columbia researchers squeeze light into nanoscale devices and circuits


Clearing out space junk, one step at a time
Toulouse, France (SPX) Jun 26, 2018
Since the start of the space age, mankind has left its mark on the orbital pathways overhead...and not always for the better. Today, some 7,000 tonnes of artificial debris - a mass equivalent to the Eiffel Tower - orbit the planet. This detritus, ranging from remnants of defunct or broken-up spacecraft to discarded rocket stages, whizzes by at a dizzying 8 km per second - a speed at which ... more
+ Smarter, faster algorithm cuts number of steps to solve problems
+ New, safer waterproof coating invented by MIT scientists
+ Probing nobelium with laser light
+ Hope for new catalysts with high activity
+ Electronic skin stretched to new limits
+ Scientists use a photonic quantum simulator to make virtual movies of molecules vibrating
+ Indian Space Agency to teach foreign students how to build satellites
Utah soil's slippery grip on nutrients
Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Lawns in the Salt Lake Valley up to 100 years old are not yet saturated in the nutrient nitrogen, which is added by fertilizer, according to a new study from University of Utah researchers. The result is surprising, since previous studies in the Eastern U.S. suggested that fertilized soil would become saturated with nitrogen within a few decades. Something different is happening in Salt La ... more
+ Iraq's treasured amber rice crop devastated by drought
+ Study links shrinking bee population, climate change
+ China drops tariffs on soybeans for some Asian nations
+ Ancestral people of Chaco Canyon likely grew their own food
+ Mesopotamians were drinking beer from individual vessels 3,500 years ago
+ Early detection of 'olive tree leprosy' with drones
+ Nestle suspended from 'sustainable' palm oil body
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