How Robots Work
Like you, NASA's robonaut has a movable body, brain, power system and
sensor system. See more pictures of robots. On the most basic level, human
beings are made up of five major components:
· A body structure
· A muscle system to move the body structure
· A sensory system that receives information about the body and the
surrounding environment
· A power source to activate the muscles and sensors
· A brain system that processes sensory information and tells the muscles
what to do
Of course, we also have some intangible attributes, such as intelligence and
morality, but on the sheer physical level, the list above about covers it.
A robot is made up of the very same components. A typical robot has a
movable physical structure, a motor of some sort, a sensor system, a power
supply and a computer "brain" that controls all of these elements.
Essentially, robots are man-made versions of animal life -- they are
machines that replicate human and animal behavior.
In this article, we'll explore the basic concept of robotics and find out
how robots do what they do.
NASA's Urban Robot, Urbie, features software-controlled cameras and sensors
that allow it to operate autonomously in many types of terrain. URBIE checks
out areas that would pose potential risks to human investigators.
NASA's Snakebots will autonomously explore other planets, digging in soil,
slithering in cracks, and getting around obstacles.
Joseph Engelberger, a pioneer in industrial robotics, once remarked "I can't
define a robot, but I know one when I see one." If you consider all the
different machines people call robots, you can see that it's nearly
impossible to come up with a comprehensive definition. Everybody has a
different idea of what constitutes a robot.
You've probably heard of several of these famous robots:
· R2D2 and C-3PO: The intelligent, speaking robots with loads of personality
in the "Star Wars" movies
· Sony's AIBO: A robotic dog that learns through human interaction
two legs like a person
· Industrial robots: Automated machines that work on assembly lines
· Data: The almost human android from "Star Trek"
· BattleBots: The remote control fighters on Comedy Central
· Bomb-defusing robots
· NASA's Mars rovers
· HAL: The ship's computer in Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey"
· Robomower: The lawn-mowing robot from Friendly Robotics
· The Robot in the television series "Lost in Space"
· MindStorms: LEGO's popular robotics kit
HowStuffWorks has several articles on other types of robots:
· How Robotic Surgery Will Work
· How Robonauts Will Work
· How Snakebots Will Work
· How Rumble Robots Work
· How Stinger Missiles Work
All of these things are considered robots, at least by some people. The
broadest definition around defines a robot as anything that a lot of people
recognize as a robot. Most roboticists (people who build robots) use a more
precise definition. They specify that robots have a reprogrammable brain (a
computer) that moves a body.