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The bio-inspired robots going undercover to study animal behaviour

Bio-inspired robots that can fly like birds and creep like cockroaches are helping researchers to understand more about how animals move and behave.

From cockroaches to peregrine falcons, researchers are getting a closer look at the lives of animals by sending robot creatures undercover. Take a look at some of these biobots that are pushing the limits of engineering.

Bat robot, USA

B2 robot bat

Bat flight is fiendishly complex, requiring a system of muscles, bones, and joints that incorporate the folding of the wings in every wingbeat. The force that bat wings generate comes from a strong but flexible covering of skin, as opposed to the rigid feathers used by birds. Basically, of all the flying beasts in the world, if you’re going to pick one to try to emulate, don’t pick a bat.

Except that’s exactly what US researchers did when they created this robotic bat, dubbed ‘B2’, to help them understand bat flight. In an article published in the journal Science Robotics, they explain how they stretched a 56-micrometer-thick (one micrometer = one-thousandth of a millimeter), silicone-based skin over B2’s wings, enabling it “to morph its articulated structure in mid-air without losing an effective and smooth aerodynamic surface”.

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