DocumentCode :
1119958
Title :
When physics rules robotics: scaling issues in the design of robots and robotic applications
Author :
Siegel, Mel
Volume :
7
Issue :
3
fYear :
2004
Firstpage :
52
Lastpage :
59
Abstract :
This article discusses some fundamental issues that arise as robots become much larger or much smaller than everyday human scale. The article\´s title is respectfully derived from C.J. Pennycuick\´s "Newton Rules Biology: A physical approach to biological problems" (1992), from which robot and robotic system designers can learn much from the performance, successes, and failings of biological evolution. Much of the discussion will focus on scaling issues that were first recognized in biological versus technological domains. These issues are discussed mostly from the biological perspective, with the assumption that the reader will have no difficulty extending the underlying principles to technological domains in general, and to the robotics domain specifically. Discussion is also focused on a hypothetical family of geometrically similar vacuum cleaners.
Keywords :
biocybernetics; design engineering; measurement theory; robots; scaling phenomena; biological evolution; physics; robot design; robotic applications; robotic system design; robotics; scaling issues; vacuum cleaners;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Instrumentation & Measurement Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1094-6969
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MIM.2004.1337914
Filename :
1337914
Link To Document :
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