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Other scientists have checked real eels, Taravella said. "It's pretty high-efficient ... but still has some wake. That's why we're not dropping eels into the tank." Computer-generated models indicate just how a robot eel should move to get through the water without any drag. Creating one to do that is far from easy. Like many of the other projects, this one is still in early stages. Most of the time, the nameless first-year prototype is hooked onto a metal pole called a mast, which is attached to sensors on a platform pulled by metal cables from one end of a 160-foot-long towing tank to the other. At the end of one session, half of its batteries were removed and it was set into the water for a free swim toward the platform. When it hit one side or headed under the platform, Taravella and graduate student Baker Potts guided it back by sticking canoe paddles in its way. "This time it tracked straighter a lot better ... Remember? It was going in circles," said Potts. Taravella said, "Year 2, we're hoping to have it remote controlled. By Year 3, we hope to have it fully autonomous," They'd also like it to wriggle up and down as well as side to side, letting it rise and dive. MIT has a pike, a sea turtle and two generations of Charlie the Robotuna. Michigan State is working on a school of fish. One aim is outdoing nature, at least as far as swimming goes, Brizzolara said. "We'd like to understand the very good performance that some sea creatures can achieve. But also we'd like to see if we can improve on that," he said. "We can produce perhaps a better result than a sea creature that's been optimized by nature. We haven't done that yet. But that's one of our long-term goals," Brizzolara said. The research could have a broad range of uses, said Drexel's Tangorra. Part of understanding how fish move is understanding how their nervous systems pull together a wide assortment of information and impulses. And knowing how their fins work could improve other equipment used to control the flow of liquid, from big pumps and pipes to blood flowing in a body. And, he said philosophically, "You don't look at a sunfish and say,
'Oh my gosh, this is the most incredible evolved device that ever came through.' But you look at it and see that evolution is a wonderful thing."
[Associated
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