As the robo-bat was being developed and refined, the researchers were able to learn how all of the muscles and ligaments in the wing work together to not only enable flight, but also keep the animal intact while it was vigorously flapping.
The practical benefits of this research include developing more energy-efficient light aircraft, and even general improvements for the aerodynamics of existing planes. And of course better equipment and more authentic costumes for masked vigilantes. More here.
2 comments:
This is kind of creepy but awesome work done on this, I love the concept.
This reminded me of the Seagull robotic wings I recently saw from the TED talks video.
robot bats > robot seagulls
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