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Snakebot – a robot, currently a simulation, with possible search and rescue applications
Snakebot – a robot, currently a simulation, with possible search and rescue applications
Photo by: Mikhail Prokopenko, CSIRO

Move over C-3PO, here comes Snakebot

Reference: 08/26
Robots that look like snakes could be used for search and rescue operations of the future.
12 February 2008

Daniel Barrett, a robotics engineering student from UNSW working at CSIRO this summer, is one of 72 vacation students participating in CSIRO's Big Day In this week.

Mr Barrett’s project, part of a CSIRO collaboration with Doshisha University in Japan, has taught him that C-3PO, Marvin the Paranoid Android and the robot from 'Lost in Space' wouldn't work well in real life.

"They were developed for TV and movies to cater for what people thought a robot should be like," he says.

"But Snakebot is modular, so it’s less likely than C-3PO to trip over rubble. And unlike Marvin, Snakebot can fix itself if it needs repairs.

“Snakebot is a currently only a computer simulation but, when fully tested, a prototype may follow.”

“They were developed for TV and movies to cater for what people thought a robot should be like."
Mr Daniel Barrett.

The Big Day In, held in Sydney on 14 and 15 February, is the culmination of 2 to 3 months' work by top students on real research projects with CSIRO experts in maths and stats, IT, materials science, manufacturing and physics. During the two days, students from CSIRO and the Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute will present their findings and hear about science careers.

Some of the other students involved are:

  • Simon Powys, a science/engineering student from Monash University, who will talk about his quest to help develop a biodegradable coffee cup, to stop us getting buried under a mountain of polystyrene. Polystyrene foam cups, like many plastic products, can last forever in nature because micro-organisms can’t break them down.
  • Erika Davies, a science student from the University of NSW, who’s been using an inkjet printer that prints gold nanoparticles to make sensors that ‘taste’ chemicals in water. These new sensors can detect very low levels of environmentally important organic chemicals like octane or toluene leaking from ships, for example.
  • Nic Warren, an arts/science student from the University of Melbourne, who will explain how maths-based risk management technologies can help banks protect themselves against fraud.

Other student projects include computer modelling of tsunamis, making catamarans that drive themselves and detecting Alzheimer’s disease earlier.

Media are welcome to attend.

For more information: What I did on my holidays

Images and Snakebot animation available at: Move over C-3PO, here comes Snakebot

Read more media releases in our Media section.

 
 

Fast facts

  • The Big Day In, held in Sydney on 14 and 15 February, is the culmination of 2 to 3 months' work by top students on real research projects with CSIRO experts in maths and stats, IT, materials science, manufacturing and physics
  • During the two days, students from CSIRO and the Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute will present their findings and hear about science careers

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media Contact

Ms Carrie Bengston
Communications Manager
Mathematics, Informatics and Statistics
Phone: 61 2 9325 3224 
Fax: 61 2 9325 3200