It seems that robots with a soft touch are all the rage.
A  flexible robot built by Harvard scientists that can wiggle and worm  through tight gaps is the latest prototype in the growing field of  soft-bodied machines.
The  inspiration for it came from squids and starfish, which deform their  shapes to move around. Robots that can manoeuvre in this way could be  particularly useful after a disaster like an earthquake, with rescuers  able to send them through small cracks.

Shaping up to be a  great innovation: The flexible robot can inflate and deflate and wiggle  and squirm to allow it to move through small gaps
They could also be deployed on battlefields where the terrain would be too rough for more conventional rigid machines...........................................................................................................................................................     
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  |  'The unique ability for soft robots to  deform allows them to go places that traditional rigid-body robots  cannot,’ Matthew Walter, a roboticist at the Massachusetts Institute of  Technology, said in an email to the Associated Press. A  team from Tufts University earlier this year showed off a four-inch  (10-centimetre) caterpillar-shaped robot made of silicone rubber that  can curl into a ball and propel itself forward. | 
The  Harvard project, funded by the Pentagon's research arm, was described  online yesterday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of  Sciences.The new robot, which took two months  to construct, is five inches (12.7 centimetres) long. Its four legs can  be separately controlled by pumping air into the limbs, either manually  or via computer. This gives the robot a range of motions including  crawling and slithering.The  researchers, led by chemist George M Whitesides, tested the robot's  flexibility by having it squirm underneath a pane of glass just  three-quarters of an inch from the surface.Scientists  maneuvered the robot through the tiny gap 15 times using a combination  of movements. In most cases, it took less than a minute to get from side  to side.Researchers  eventually want to improve the robot's speed, but were pleased that it  did not break from constant inflation and deflation.‘It  was tough enough to survive,’ said Harvard postdoctoral fellow Robert  Shepherd, adding that the robot can traverse on a variety of surfaces  including felt cloth, gravel, mud and even Jell-O.There  were drawbacks, though. The robot is tethered to an external power  source and scientists need to find a way to integrate the source before  it can be deployed in the real world.‘There  are many challenges to actively moving soft robots and no easy  solutions,’ Tufts neurobiologist Barry Trimmer, who worked on the  caterpillar robot, said in an email.Robotics  researcher Carmel Majidi, who heads the Soft Machines Lab at Carnegie  Mellon University, said the latest robot is innovative even as it builds  on previous work.‘It's a simple concept, but they're getting lifelike biological motions,’ he said.Click here to see video. Environment Clean Generations 
 
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