Flexible robot snakes its way where humans cannot go

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NATORI, Miyagi Prefecture--Developers have unveiled a snake-like robot that they say can worm its way around obstacles and take videos in hard-to-reach places, such as disaster sites piled with rubble.

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Asahi Asia & Japan Watch
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38.1867, 140.8902
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38.1867
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140.8902
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38.1867,140.8902
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By SHINGO FUKUSHIMA/ Staff Writer
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By SHINGO FUKUSHIMA/ Staff Writer
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English
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Flexible robot snakes its way where humans cannot go
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NATORI, Miyagi Prefecture--Developers have unveiled a snake-like robot that they say can worm its way around obstacles and take videos in hard-to-reach places, such as disaster sites piled with rubble.

Known as the "Robo Scope," the device is the work of general contractor Shimizu Corp., Tohoku University and the Kobe-based International Rescue System Institute, a nonprofit organization. The researchers showed the device to reporters here on Feb. 28.

The hose-shaped robot is 7 centimeters in diameter and 10 meters long. Its segments carry a dense brush made of fine nylon hairs. The hairs vibrate, and, acting like the cilia of micro-organisms, they inch the robot forward.

The head of the robot can be adapted to carry various sensors. A video camera would allow it to search for survivors trapped beneath rubble, while a dosimeter would allow operators to explore conditions inside a damaged nuclear plant without risking human life.

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