Cargando…

BiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling Locomotion

The book ‘BiLBIQ: A biologically inspired Robot with walking and rolling locomotion’ deals with implementing a locomotion behavior observed in the biological archetype Cebrennus villosus to a robot prototype whose structural design needs to be developed.   The biological sample is investigated as fa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: King, Ralf Simon
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34682-8
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1501104
_version_ 1780927031045783552
author King, Ralf Simon
author_facet King, Ralf Simon
author_sort King, Ralf Simon
collection CERN
description The book ‘BiLBIQ: A biologically inspired Robot with walking and rolling locomotion’ deals with implementing a locomotion behavior observed in the biological archetype Cebrennus villosus to a robot prototype whose structural design needs to be developed.   The biological sample is investigated as far as possible and compared to other evolutional solutions within the framework of nature’s inventions. Current achievements in robotics are examined and evaluated for their relation and relevance to the robot prototype in question. An overview of what is state of the art in actuation ensures the choice of the hardware available and most suitable for this project. Through a constant consideration of the achievement of two fundamentally different ways of locomotion with one and the same structure, a robot design is developed and constructed taking hardware constraints into account. The development of a special leg structure that needs to resemble and replace body elements of the biological archetype is a special challenge to be dealt with. Finally a robot prototype was achieved, which is able to walk and roll - inspired by the spider Cebrennus villosus.  
id cern-1501104
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2013
publisher Springer
record_format invenio
spelling cern-15011042021-04-21T23:56:36Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-642-34682-8http://cds.cern.ch/record/1501104engKing, Ralf SimonBiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling LocomotionEngineeringThe book ‘BiLBIQ: A biologically inspired Robot with walking and rolling locomotion’ deals with implementing a locomotion behavior observed in the biological archetype Cebrennus villosus to a robot prototype whose structural design needs to be developed.   The biological sample is investigated as far as possible and compared to other evolutional solutions within the framework of nature’s inventions. Current achievements in robotics are examined and evaluated for their relation and relevance to the robot prototype in question. An overview of what is state of the art in actuation ensures the choice of the hardware available and most suitable for this project. Through a constant consideration of the achievement of two fundamentally different ways of locomotion with one and the same structure, a robot design is developed and constructed taking hardware constraints into account. The development of a special leg structure that needs to resemble and replace body elements of the biological archetype is a special challenge to be dealt with. Finally a robot prototype was achieved, which is able to walk and roll - inspired by the spider Cebrennus villosus.  Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:15011042013
spellingShingle Engineering
King, Ralf Simon
BiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling Locomotion
title BiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling Locomotion
title_full BiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling Locomotion
title_fullStr BiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling Locomotion
title_full_unstemmed BiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling Locomotion
title_short BiLBIQ A Biologically Inspired Robot with Walking and Rolling Locomotion
title_sort bilbiq a biologically inspired robot with walking and rolling locomotion
topic Engineering
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34682-8
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1501104
work_keys_str_mv AT kingralfsimon bilbiqabiologicallyinspiredrobotwithwalkingandrollinglocomotion