Watch | What is a Cyborg Cockroach and how can it save lives?
The Hindu
A video on cyborg cockroaches and how they can help save human lives trapped under rubble
Disasters like earthquakes and building collapses often lead to survivors being trapped under the rubble, unable to move themselves due to injury or being buried too deep to call out for help. First responders risk their lives trying to find these people before they die of their wounds or suffocation.
Ever imagined insects being the ones to save human lives?
You heard that right.
Researchers in Japan are working on a “cyborg cockroach,” or a remote-controlled insect wearing a tiny backpack of solar cells and electronic hardware.
This set-up would let the cockroaches to explore dangerous ruins and obey commands from remote controllers in order to find survivors trapped under stone.
In order to make this idea a reality, Kenjiro Fukuda and his team at the Japanese research institute Riken, located close to Tokyo, developed a solar cell film that is 4 microns in width.
In other words, a strand of your hair is about 25 times thicker than this ultra-thin film, which is attached to the cockroach.