Morning Overview on MSN
Princeton-built 3D-printed soft robot moves and folds using heat, not motors
A paper crane that flaps its wings without a single motor inside it sounds like a magic trick. But engineers at Princeton ...
If you want to work with robots you can do all sorts of learning with software and simulation, but nothing quite beats ...
This a robot can walk, without electronics, and only with the addition of a cartridge of compressed gas, right off the 3D-printer. It can also be printed in one go, from one material. Imagine a robot ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Origami-inspired robot built from printable polymers uses electric current to move
With their ability to shapeshift and manipulate delicate objects, soft robots could work as medical implants, deliver drugs ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
3D-printed soft robot moves using heat instead of motors or external systems
Engineers at Princeton University have built a new class of soft robots that move ...
What would a space ER look like? Bio-inks, magnetic robots, and fungi-inspired tubes are just some of the futuristic options. By Tatyana Woodall Published Jul 25, 2023 9:00 AM EDT Add Popular Science ...
Researchers at Leiden University have developed 3D-printed microrobots that operate without sensors or motors.
Carnegie Mellon University Assistant Professor Stelian Coros shows off one of the first robots created using his software and a 3D printer. CMU Robotics Institute assistant professor Stelian Coros was ...
Your average 3D printer is just a nozzle shooting out hot plastic while being moved around by a precise robotic mechanism. There’s nothing stopping you replacing the robot and moving around the ...
Mankind has been trying to get back to the moon for decades, and it looks like NASA's Artemis project is on track to send the first crewed mission to the moon in over 50 years by mid-2027. But where ...
So the waste problem in 3D printing is really a chemistry problem. Once these materials harden, they’re locked into their ...
Imagine a future in which you could 3D-print an entire robot or stretchy, electronic medical device with the press of a button—no tedious hours spent assembling parts by hand. That possibility may be ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results