"You might think
the best shape changers are kind of like an octopus or a worm or
a slug but yet we know that cockroaches can go through these
tiny little cracks," said Robert Full, a professor of
Integrative Biology at the University of California, Berkeley.
Researchers put roaches through a series of experiments that
involved the insects running though tiny tunnels a quarter of
their size and fitting through openings just millimeters wide.
"In order to understand how they can go in these little spaces
we actually did CT scans to look inside and we found no hard
part," said Full.
"Exoskeletons in general are composed of stiff but not too stiff
plates and tubes connected by compliant membranes and those can
all be compressed but still function effectively," he added.
According to study leader Kaushik Jayaram, a postdoctoral fellow
at Harvard University, roaches can run nearly full speed, even
when squeezing through an area that compresses their body down
to half of its size. Additionally, the insects' malleable
structure can withstand forces 900 times their body weight
without injury.
It's this list of impressive credentials that has led to CRAM -
short for Compressible Robot with Articulated Microstructures. A
fancy name for what basically amounts to a robotic roach.
"It's palm sized, it's bigger so it can contain more payload,
sensors and things in the future and it can be compressed in and
it can still run in that confined space much like what we see in
the animal," said Full.
'Ick' factor aside. It's a roaches' uncanny ability to crawl
through walls in your house that lays the foundation for robots
that will be capable of crawling through spaces in disaster
zones in search of survivors.
So while you may be completely disgusted by the creepy critters
- it's time to give the cockroach a bit of respect.
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