

Digging in the dirt may not be a particularly piquant robotic function, but it helps when you’re doing it on Mars. At present, NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander is scheduled to head that direction — weather permitting — on August 3rd. Phoenix is the first mission of NASA’s Mars Scout Program
competitively proposed, relatively cheap missions to the red planet.
Selected in 2003, Phoenix saves money by using a lander structure and other components originally built for a cancelled 2001 mission. The robotic arm will scrape into the icy soil on a Martian arctic plain next spring, collecting samples and bringing them back onto the Phoenix’s science deck where it will be analyzed in terms of aquatic history and possible complex organic materials.
Artificial Snot Enhances Sensors
Leave it to the people who invented black pudding, the Bowler hat, and imperial measurements to keep coming up with strange concepts. One of the latest is “artificial snot,” which researchers at the University of Warwick and the University of Leicester have devised to enhance the performance of electronic noses, which are commonly used in robotics and other applications ranging from food quality control to toxic substance sensing.
It seems that the human nose incorporates more than 100 million receptors that work togeth¬er in very complex ways to identify the molecules they encounter. However, electronic noses often have fewer than 50 sensors, so they discern a much narrower range of smells. One of the ways a
natural nose accomplishes its mission is to dissolve the scents in mucus, allowing them to arrive at receptors at different speeds, and our brain somehow uses this information to sharpen the smelling operation. Mimicking this process, the Warwick and Leicester team placed a 10 micron thick layer of polymer, normally used to separate gases, over the sensors in their electronic nose. Apparently, the device can now make heretofore impossible distinctions, such as between milk and a banana. The improved device, includ¬ng the sensors and mucus, can be produced for less than $10, so keep it in mind for your next project. Details are available in the Proceedings of the Roya Society)
High-Torque, Thin-Package Motor
Also on the component level is an improved planetary gear train pancake motor from Haydon Switch & Instrument (www.hsi-inc.com). By using a gear train located inside the motor, Haydon has devised a product with a package that is only 18.5 mm thick and 80 mm in diameter. Nevertheless, it provides up to 120 oz-in (85 N-cm) of torque and is available with a 3.75° step angle and a the hospital rather than the clink, having developed hypothermia from the 1°C (34°F) temperature. When asked why he took off his clothes, the suspect reportedly just said, “Leave me alone. I’m not feeling well.”enough for nearly anyone to build from off-the-shelf parts and (b) sophisticated enough to perform useful operations under wireless Internet control. The dea has manifested itself in the form of the Telepresence Robot Kit (TeRK), which is actually a set of “recipes” that one can follow to create a wide range of customized bots. They can take many forms, from a mobile model equipped with a digital camera to a flower loaded with infrared sensors (see photo). All TeRKs are based on the same controller, called Qwerk, which combines a com¬puter with the various software and hardware components of the assembly. Although the TeRK goal is to make available highly capable robots that are affordable for students and anyone else nterested in robotics, the website says that a robotic flower will cost you about $750 to build, which is more than I paid for my last car, so be advised that “afford¬able” is a somewhat subjective concept. Recipes, software, technical support, and other information are available free at the TeRK website The Qwerk controller is available for sale from Charmed Labs . SV
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