Interesting Engineering on MSN
Magnetic ‘muscles’ turn origami into crawling robots that move and heal from within
Once inside, a magnetic field guides and unfolds it at the target site, where it releases medicine in a controlled and steady ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Paper-thin magnetic muscles bring origami robots to life for medical use
A new 3D printing technique can create paper-thin "magnetic muscles," which can be applied to origami structures to make them ...
Devin Balkcom, a student in Carnegie Mellon University's doctoral program in robotics, was looking for a challenge when he decided to develop the world's first origami-folding robot as the ...
News Medical on MSN
Soft magnetic muscles power innovative origami robots for biomedical use
A new 3-D printing technique can create paper-thin "magnetic muscles," which can be applied to origami structures to make them move.
James Vincent is a senior reporter who has covered AI, robotics, and more for eight years at The Verge. Researchers from MIT have designed a new ingestible “robot” that could one day be used to patch ...
A robot that can make delicate paper models using the ancient Japanese art of origami has been developed by a US student. Origami involves folding and sometimes tearing paper to build three ...
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