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Scientists are turning dead spiders into robots, the tech is called ‘necrobotics’ [WATCH]

Scientists are turning dead spiders into robots, the tech is called 'necrobotics' [WATCH]
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Arachnophobia is an extreme or irrational fear of profit. Treatment for that is usually exposure therapy, where a person is presented with pictures and other profit videos or videos such as scorpions.
But not all Arachnophobes are open for such care. Exposing them into large profits will only produce hard screams or panic attacks.

As if a strange person with eight-legged giants was not enough in the film and nightmares, some scientists now turn dead spiders into robots.
A postgraduate student named Faye Yap and an engineer named Daniel Preston has found a way to use a dead profit -crushed.
Yep and his colleagues at Rice University have worked on a wolf profit. Their work has reached a breakthrough because they can use the dead Arachnid feet to spread and hold objects, according to Science Alert.
The creation of robots has been named ‘necrobotics’.
The researchers said spider’s footwork was very complex and almost impossible to be imitated using a man-made model. That is why scientists attach to the existing system, from profit -profit, with some mechanical additions.

Profit -profit can hold heavy materials with small feet because “profit -Ababa extends each foot by actively contracting the muscles in prosoma (Cephalothorax) to increase internal hydraulic pressure.”
Researchers have now explained in a paper that the concept of necrobotic is a big step going forward in robotics.
“The concept of necrobotic proposed in this work utilizes a unique design made by nature that can be complicated or even impossible to replicate artificially,” they explained.
The team can make a profit grip -Aba dead to a small ball. They use experiments to determine the peak grip of 0.35 milinewtons.

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