A robot made at Stanford University in California is jumping down to wrecks and depressed planes such that people can’t. Known as OceanOneK, the robot permits its administrators to feel like they’re submerged wayfarers, as well.
OceanOneK looks like a human jumper from the front, with arms and hands and eyes that have a 3D vision, catching the submerged world in full tone. The rear of the robot has PCs and eight multidirectional engines that assist it with cautiously moving the locales of delicate submerged ships.
Robot Invented to Move Submerged Ships
At the point when an administrator at the sea’s surface purposes controls to coordinate OceanOneK, the robot’s haptic (contact-based) criticism framework makes the individual feel the water’s opposition as well as the forms of relics.
OceanOneK’s sensible sight and contact capacities are sufficient to cause individuals to feel like they’re jumping down to the profundities without the risks or colossal submerged pressure, that a human jumper would insight.
- The new underwater robot was found in California.
- It was designed to move the submerged ships underwater.
- This robot can reach the deep that man cannot reach.
Stanford University roboticist Oussama Khatib and his understudies collaborated with remote ocean archeologists and started sending the robot to make a plunge in September. The group just completed one more submerged endeavor in July.
“You are moving exceptionally near this astounding construction, and something unbelievable happens when you contact it: You feel it,”
said Khatib, the Weichai Professor in Stanford’s School of Engineering and overseer of the Stanford Robotics Lab.