A warning to all smugglers: A new underwater robot could be used to
sniff out contraband — including weapons and drugs — hidden aboard
ships.
Developed by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT), the new, oval-shaped robot may be small (it's slightly smaller
than a football), but it features some big crime-stopping abilities. One
side of the bot is flat, which enables it to slide along the bottom of a
ship to perform ultrasound scans of the vessel's hull.
This ultrasound capability not only lets the robot monitor what's
inside a ship, but it also enables it to detect false hulls and
propeller shafts, which are commonly used by smugglers to hide
contraband, according to the researchers. And best of all, the bot's
propulsion system is specially designed to minimize visible wake, making
the bot a good fit for jobs that require stealth, such as underwater
patrolling.
"It's very expensive for port security to use traditional robots for
every small boat coming into the port," Sampriti Bhattacharyya, the
robot's co-designer and a graduate student in mechanical engineering at
MIT, said in a statement. But the MIT robot is relatively inexpensive because it uses 3D printing to make the main structural components for each robot, Bhattacharyya said.
“If this is cheap enough — if I can get this out for $600, say — why
not just have 20 of them doing collaborative inspection? And if it
breaks, it's not a big deal. It's very easy to make," Bhattacharyya
said.
The part of the bot that houses the ultrasound panel, as well as other
electronic components, is waterproof. This half of the bot contains a
lithium-ion battery that can keep its charge for about 40 minutes, the
researchers said. But by making the propulsion system more efficient,
the researchers think they can increase the amount of time the robot can
spend underwater(before it needs to be recharged) to 100 minutes.
The propulsion system is housed on the other, permeable side of the
swimming bot. This half of the robot is made up of six pumps, each of
which expels water through rubber tubes.
Some of these tubes are vented at the rounded side of the bot (the side
opposite from the flat, ultrasound-emitting part of the bot). This
keeps the device pressed up against the side of whatever ship it is
trying to inspect. The other pumps vent out at either end of the robot,
allowing it to move both forward and backward in the water. Initial
tests of the underwater robot showed that it can propel itself in a straight line while scanning the hull of a ship, the researchers said.
The new bot is of particular interest to military officials, who would
like to use it for a range of underwater operations, including detecting
smuggled weapons or drugs, or finding stress fractures in the hulls of
ships and other vessels, said Nathan Betcher, a special-tactics officer
in the U.S. Air Force.
The robot could also be used to speed up the processing and routing of regular maritime traffic, Betcher said in a statement.
original source by : http://www.livescience. com/48117-underwater-robots-stop-smugglers.html
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