Sentences with phrase «tiny motors»

The finished robot weighs 93 grams and is controlled using tiny motors in its backbone.
The other is a ring worn high on the finger that uses tiny motors to stretch the skin under the ring.
It's all thanks to the stainless steel construction and the powerful, tiny motor hidden inside.
That's kind of what happens when a person straps on the SuperFlex exosuit equipped with tiny motors called actuators from SRI Robotics.
Paul Weiss at the University of California, Los Angeles, says the car can help us unravel why tiny motors in nature, such as the motor proteins that move material around in cells, are so highly efficient.
For the past few years, the team has been crafting a miniature city out of tiny motors, lightbulbs, and cardboard houses for the adventure game Lumino City (2014).
Many bacteria swim using flagella — long tails that are attached to tiny motors made of proteins, just tens of nanometres wide.
Vuletic says that at the nanoscale, friction may exact a greater force — for instance, creating wear and tear on tiny motors much faster than occurs at larger scales.
Inside cells there are tiny motor engines that ride on thin rods called microtubules.
The nanocar could be used to transport miniature loads of cargo and to help unravel why tiny motors in nature tend to be so much more efficient than large - scale ones.
It also made way to include image stabilization to the cameras, which uses a tiny motor around the lens to counteract against both vibration and shaky hand movement in photos and videos.
Using a tiny motor and some batteries, these bouncer chairs will gently vibrate to soothe any baby.
As the scanner pokes its prey (here, a small, green plastic frog) with a needle - like probe driven by a tiny motor, a light sensor detects contact between probe and object with an accuracy of 30 micrometers, and a linear actuator translates the rotation of the Lego gears into linear distance at a resolution of 6.25 micrometers.
A tiny motor then moves the contact in that direction.
«We printed a tiny motor,» says Jacobson, «and it spun!»
It has a thin plate controlled by three tiny motors that presses against the finger pad.
Another of the lab's achievements is its success in explaining how a six - sided protein ring called helicase — essential in all life — attaches to the double helix and works like a tiny motor, unzipping the two DNA strands as other molecular machines go about copying one of them.
This tiny motor is set to replace the regular non-turbo 1.6 that used to be the Focus range's centre of gravity, producing the same 123bhp, a lot more low - end torque and dramatically improved fuel economy, in real driving as well as in the official figures.
The tiny motor generates 120 PS (118 horses) and 170 Nm (125 pound - feet) of torque and also mates to the company's six - speed manual gearbox.
Seems with electric boost you can get over 100ho performance with a tiny motor.
Blur is the perfect tonic for the kart - racer fan that's tired of the bright colours, chirpy characters and tiny motors.
These include the NAND flash - memory chips that store data, as well as liquid - crystal displays and the tiny motors that enable the Switch's hand - held controllers to imitate the feel of an ice cube shaking in a glass.
That's a tiny motor compared to what we are seeing on TreeHugger, a slower speed limit and note that they are pedelecs, where the motor is giving an assist and stops when the cyclist stops, probably with no throttle option.
A tiny motor in the Galaxy S9 / S9 +'s camera module is responsible for the adjustment — it contracts (when set to f / 2.4) or expands (when set to f / 1.5) a ring around the sensor's lens.
Haptic feedback, or the vibrations that occur whenever you touch the GS4 in certain situations (like typing), can draw precious power by activating a tiny motor inside your phone.
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