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For best results, wait for the entire video file to
download before viewing. Then, click arrow to play.
If video fails to start click
here.
Requires
Quicktime
5
10 seconds / 581 KB
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Video
source: "Robofly" (2001, Pyramid Media). Produced by Jason
Spingarn-Koff. Animation by John Atkinson |
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This animation
shows a micromechanical flying insect taking off and landing.
The
animated robot rests on a tripod of solar panels, has polyester
wings and stainless steel struts. The wings aren't able to do the
complex arcs that a fly can manage, but do simple things, like flap
and rotate. In this simulation, the wings are about half an inch
long and look like miniature paddles.
After the Quicktime
movie loads and has played through, use the Quicktime controls to
click through one frame at a time to see what cannot be seen at
full speed. Faster than the human eye is able to observe, the animated
robot's wings, like that of fly, can flap and rotate simultaneously,
at 150 times per second.
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