Skip to main content

Fire Ants: The Material of the Future

 

What can a creature with a brain smaller than a pinhead, have to teach us about the nature of physics, robotics and the future of advanced technology?
For the fire ant, what it may lack in size, it makes up for in millions of years of evolutionary genius. Over the winding road to the modern fire ant, it has made more than a few adaptations that are, to say the least, incredible.
Image: Fire ants clinging together to make a rope bridge for their colony. How can we translate their skills for advanced technology?
Source: Wikimedia
So, what do I mean when I say that a fire ant can be incredible? Well, let’s start with this: Did you know that a colony of fire ants can be considered a material? Better yet, a material that can be a liquid or a solid?
A group of remarkable scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology’s Biolocomotion Lab has done just about anything you can do to a colony of fire ants, to test their remarkable capabilities. For example, coating them in gold, submerging them in water, and tying them together. They have been able to not just learn about a small corner of the natural world, but find inspiration for cutting-edge technology.

Via: Vox 1
At Ever Widening Circles, we talk a lot about the importance of breaking down silos of thought. It’s all a matter of asking better questions: What are the novel possibilities when art informs the way we study biology, or when the natural world alters the future of robotics?  Also, where are the threads of connection between seemingly disparate systems

Comments

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow
    I knew fire ants were amazing, but I didn't know this much

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

US Has Contributed $495m For Malaria Control In Nigeria Since 2011 – Symington

US Has Contributed $495m For Malaria Control In Nigeria Since 2011 – Symington The United States says it has contributed $495m for malaria control in Nigeria since 2011. This is according to a statement by the US Ambassador to Nigeria, Stuart Symington. Symington made this disclosure in a piece, titled ‘US salutes health champions in Nigeria leading efforts to end malaria’, to commemorate the World Malaria Day. The US envoy said, “On World Malaria Day, the United States is proud to recognize our partnership with Nigeria and support your fight to beat this deadly disease. We salute all Nigeria’s health champions—from health workers to mothers, pharmacists to drivers, journalists to researchers, teachers to warehouse managers—and all those working to end malaria. “As a global community, we have achieved remarkable success. Together, we’ve cut malaria mortality by half in sub-Saharan Africa and saved over 7 million lives since 2000. In Nigeria, the U...

Snake Robots: Can You Watch This Without Squirming?

WRITTEN BY  LIESL ULRICH-VERDERBER Are you afraid of  snakes ? What about  robots ? What about  snake  robots? Now  here’s  one of those new innovations in robotics that’s solving problems by combining two things that don’t  quite  seem to go together at first thought. Today Ever Widening Circles will take you on a little journey of possibility when it comes to pure ingenuity. Source:  Nico Zevallos and Chaohui Gong Did you ever stop to ask yourself why most of us envision the human form when we think of the word “Robot?” What if the real potential of robotics lies with thinking outside that box? Here’s your introduction to snake robotics! Having the flexibility and movements of a slithering reptile allows these robots to squeeze into spaces that their human-form, mechanical cousins, and we humans, haven’t been able to explore. They can do so much more! We will be able to identify structural problems in hidde...

World’s First 5G Phone Released In South Korea

World’s First 5G Phone Released In South Korea A Samsung Galaxy S10 5G smartphone is displayed at an SK Telecom shop during a launch event in Seoul on April 5, 2019. JUNG Yeon-Je / AFP Samsung Electronics on Friday released the Galaxy S10 5G, the world’s first available smartphone with built-in fifth-generation communications technology, as South Korea seeks to build a lead in the transformative system. On Wednesday the South became the first country to commercially launch nationwide 5G services, with three super fast networks going live offering data speeds that allow users to download entire movies in less than a second. Hours later US giant Verizon began commercial services in Chicago and Minneapolis, after rival AT&T made a 5G-based system available to selected users in parts of 12 cities in December. South Korea’s three mobile carriers — SK Telecom, KT and LG Uplus — held launch events across Seoul for the Galaxy S10, whose base version costs 1.39 milli...