Saturday, August 28, 2010

MIT Unveils Oil-Skimming Robot Swarm Prototype

Doesn't address the problem of subsurface oil though

starSlashdot
August 28, 2010 3:06 PM
by timothy

MIT Unveils Oil-Skimming Robot Swarm Prototype

destinyland writes "Today MIT reveals a swarm of autonomous floating robots that can digest an oil spill. The 16-foot robots drag a nanowire mesh that acts like a conveyor belt to soak up surface oil 'like paper towels soak up water,' absorbing 20 times its weight and then harmlessly 'digesting' the oil by burning it off. Powered by 21.5 square feet of solar panels, the 'Seaswarm' robots run on the power of a lightbulb, and with just 100 watts 'could potentially clean continuously for weeks' without human intervention, MIT announced. The swarm uses GPS data and communicates wirelessly to move as a coordinated group to 'corral, absorb and process' oil spills, and MIT researchers estimate that a fleet of 5,000 could clean up a gulf-sized spill within one month."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

earth


Art Trembanis
CSHEL
University of Delaware

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