About Robotic Body Parts

Robotic body parts - generally 5 

1. Chassis.      2. Movement tools like motors and wheels or propellers.      3. Communication media.   

4. Sensors.       5. Power supply.

Now we are gonna talking about robot others body like hands, lips, butt and armpit etc :

Robotic Hand :

In the world of vidoeconferencing, it's difficult to get close to people. Businessmen often size each other up by shaking hands, a custom that goes back to antiquity. Roboticists from Osaka University have a way to fill in that gap in global meeting. The Robot Hand is made of silicon and sponge, can be heated to body temperature, and is embedded with pressure sensors. The hand that controls it remotely transmits the grip and amount of pressure to the person he's shaking hands with. Click here for watch robotic hand video.

Robot lips send kisses :

Lond distance romances suffer the same lack of tactile sensation. Up to the plate steps Kissenger, a robotic device that connects with a faraway lover via Skype. That is, if your lover has another Kissenger. The sensors in the odd-looking device transmit your lip movements to your partner. And vice-versa. The company that make Kissenger, Lovotics, also make a couple of the other devices to transmit your passion. Click here to watch image.

Robotic Butt Resonds to Touch :

At first glance, and you may blush, the robot butt seems like some kind of art project. But it appears to be an exercise in robotic research. A human-shaped pair of reactions: tension, twitch, and protrusion, Sensors trigger the reaction of airbags implanted in the posterior. Click here.

Robotic Armpit Sweats:

No- one here it before but it's true. How many times have you said to yourselt,"Gee, I wish I had an artificial armpit that sweats"? This prototype armpit produces industrial Japanese sweat, sort of like the real thing. This was built by Kevin Grennan, as part of the art project called The Smell of Control: Fear, Focus and Trust. Click to look the awesome thing.

Robot Skin senses touch:

Stanford researcher Zhenan Bao has been working on electronic skin. The flexible, stretchable, and resilient skin in embedded with tiny sensors that can detect the sensation of touch. Embedded transistors notice changes in the sensonrs and send signals about it. And it's solar powered! There's nbo word on whether the skin will ever be implanted in humans, but the applications for using it on robots or in uniforms is exciting. The sensors in the electronic skin could somday be programmed to detect biojazard, weapons, or nuclear fallout. Click here.

Robot Eyes See:

Dianne Ashworth suffered severe vision loss due to retinitis pigmentosa. The Australian was fitted with a bionic eye in July. The device, developed by Bionic Vision Australia, is a set of glasses with a camera attached. A wire from the camera is implanted in the uesr's retina, so the light signals are sent directly to the retina, and then via optic nerve to the brain. The bionic eye requires the patient to have some functioning retical tissue. For those who have no retinal function, the Argus II bionic eye implant is beginning to be used in Europe. The device includes camera goggles and a wireless receiver that is implanted behind the eye. The receiver consists of 60 electrodes, which light up like a 60-pixel display and sends those signals to the optic nerve. It be lo-res, but it's an artificial retina! Click here to look image how a girl use a robot eye. Click here to look retina image.

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