Researchers build robot that can heal itself

Cornell University engineers have designed a small X-shaped robot with the ability to detect damage and restore itself back to functional condition. The soft-bodied machine utilizes changes in light to determine where the researchers have cut it, which then triggers interlocking polymer chains in its skin to heal over the punctured area. Like a Terminator machine from the movies, the bot demonstrated it could survive multiple injuries, taking about a minute per puncture to self-heal and continue moving. The team hopes their research will allow robots to survive for longer in hostile environments like space.

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By Tim Binnall / Coast to Coast AM News Editor

Tim Binnall is the news editor for the Coast to Coast AM website as well as the host of the pioneering paranormal podcast Binnall of America. For more than a decade and over the course of hundreds of BoA programs, he has interviewed a vast array of researchers, spanning a wide spectrum of paranormal genres and ranging from bonafide esoteric icons to up-and-coming future players in 'the field.' A graduate of Syracuse University, Binnall aims to maintain an outsider's perspective on the paranormal world with a distinct appreciation for its absurdities and a keen interest in the personalities and sociology of esoteric studies.

(Source: coasttocoastam.com; December 10, 2022; https://tinyurl.com/2fcau3xw)
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