A robot named Cheetah has set a new world speed record for legged robots, running faster than the fastest human. The headless machineis funded by the Pentagon and reached 28.3mph (45.5km/h) when tested on a treadmill. Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt's top speed is 27.78mph (44.7km/h).
The project is part of efforts to develop robots for military use. It has been created by the Massachusetts robotics company Boston Dynamics and backed by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa).
According to Darpa, the aim is to
"more effectively assist war fighters across a greater range of
missions".
The Cheetah, which is powered by a
hydraulic pump, broke its own record of 18mph (29km/h), recorded in February.
"The Cheetah had a slight
advantage over Bolt as it ran on a treadmill," Darpa said in a statement,
"but most of the power Cheetah used was to swing and lift its legs fast
enough, not to propel itself forward."
The robot is to be tested in the
fields in 2013
The machine's design has been
inspired by the real cheetah, the fastest land animal, which can reach speeds
of 75mph (121km/h).
"Cheetahs happen to be
beautiful examples of how natural engineering has created speed and agility
across rough terrain," said Gill Pratt, Darpa programme manager.
"Our Cheetah bot borrows ideas
from nature's design to inform stride patterns, flexing and unflexing of parts
like the back, placement of limbs and stability."
"What we gain through Cheetah
and related research efforts are technological building blocks that create
possibilities for a whole range of robots suited to future Department of
Defense missions."
Noel Sharkey, professor of
artificial intelligence and robotics at the University of Sheffield, said the
robot was "an incredible technical achievement, but it's unfortunate that
it's going to be used to kill people".
"It's going to be used for
chasing people across the desert, I would imagine. I can't think of many
civilian applications - maybe for hunting, or farming, for rounding up sheep.
"But of course if it's used for
combat, it would be killing civilians as well as it's not going to be able to
discriminate between civilians and soldiers."
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