We can thank MIT for adding another piece of weaponry to our future oil spill cleanup arsenal. Dubbed the Seaswarm, this autonomous 16-foot long, 7- foot wide robot features an oil-absorbing conveyor belt covered with a nanowire mesh, carefully designed to absorb up to 20 times its weight in oil all while repelling water. But as impressive as that may sound, perhaps the best feature of this new bot is the fact that it is completely autonomous. Affixed with two square meters of solar panels, unlike traditional oil skimmers which require frequent maintenance, the Seaswarm can run at full power continuously for weeks on end. Jump ahead to see a video of this amazing robot in action.
MIT’s Seaswarm Robots Could Clean Up Gulf-Sized Spill in a Month
by Ariel Schwartz, 08/25/10
filed under: green gadgets
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Image via Shutterstock/click ahead to see a video of the actual robot European scientists from BTH Zurich Bio-Inspired Robotics have created a robot that is capable
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this would be great and all if the oil wasn’t a few thousand feet down.
Maybe they can make a baby submarine and use the same idea to clean that up. If it runs low on battery it can come up to recharge like a whale comes up to take a breathe.
[...] ready for super-charged solar cells! MIT researchers announced this week that they have developed self-assembling solar cells that can be [...]