Robot cheetah outruns Usain Bolt

A US defense department robot has reached 28.3 mph on a treadmill — faster than any human in recorded history.

The robot, dubbed Cheetah, is the work of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. It’s the closest thing to a real life Q from Bond and gets to work on ultra-cool projects in the hope of developing military advantages.

The Cheetah project aims to develop tactical robots, used for reconnaissance missions and path clearing, so that they can maintain speed while dealing with obstacles. Staff recently decided to try out a side-effect of the work: the idea that if Cheetah can move quickly in unfavorable conditions, it might be able to be to reach extremely impressive speeds in perfect conditions.

It’s safe to say that proved the case. Although Cheetah has previously been timed at 18 mph (a robot record), researchers decided to take a peak reading over 20 meters. The result was 28.3 mph.

Taking a reading over 20 meters is significant because that’s also the distance used to calculate the fastest ever human run. Analysis of footage showed that Usain Bolt covered a 20 meter section of track at 27.78 mph at the peak of his record-setting 100 meter run in 2009.

It is a slightly unfair comparison, even leaving aside that it’s man vs machine. DARPA noted that the run being on a treadmill gave Cheetah the equivalent of a 28.3 mph tail wind. That equates to 12.65 meters per second, far above the 2 mps allowable for an athletics world record to stand. Of course, that aspect is further complicated by the fact that Cheetah’s energy largely went to lifting its limbs rather than forward propulsion.

Whether Cheetah could actually beat Bolt in a track race is another matter. One issue would be what if any loss of speed came from being on a track rather than a treadmill. Another is whether Cheetah could maintain its speed better than Bolt. There might also be an issue with whether it kept perfectly straight for the full distance.

The start and acceleration would also play a role. The obvious answer of prepping Cheetah to start near-instantly upon the gun would be out of the question as the rules on false starts use an assumption about how quickly a human can react and a racer starting quicker than this can be disqualified even if they don’t move until after the gun. Still, starting as quickly as allowed would likely give an advantage over the relatively slower Bolt.

Finally, such a race would present practical differences as the finishing line technology might struggle with the difference in height between Bolt’s torso and whatever the equivalent section is in Cheetah.



Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters [Movie Trailer]

15 years after their traumatic gingerbread-house incident, siblings Hansel and Gretel have become a formidable team of bounty hunters who track and kill witches all over the world.

[Via]

Game of Thrones Cover: One Voice, One Violin, 140 Tracks [Video]

A few months after releasing their totally epic Interpretation of Skyrim’s main theme, Lindsey Stirling and Peter Hollens are back with yet another amazing cover of one of today’s most popular TV Series. Enjoy!

[Peter Hollens]



Pioneers! O (Space) Pioneers! A Walt Whitman + NASA Mashup

Surely there’s a sizeable portion of geekdom who loves both literature and space as much as I do. There seems to be at least one other person, because this exists: A video montage of awesome NASA footage set to the soundtrack of Walt Whitman reading his poem, “Pioneers! O Pioneers!”

[brainpickings]

Awesome Science Stuff That Happened Today [Sep 6]

It was a good day for science-loving geeks everywhere. Today’s big science haps, in no particular order:

A new look at DNA says there’s no such thing as junk in the trunk

[image]

Assuming you call the human genome “the trunk.” ENCODE – the Encyclopedia Of DNA Elements – is a project that starts where the Human Genome Project ended: we know what the genome looks like, now what does it do? Over the last decade, 442 scientists have put 147 different types of cells through 24 different varieties of experiments. What they’ve found is that while only about 1.5% of our genetic info carries instructions for protein-building (or, making us living, breathing creatures), the rest is far from being what we’ve affectionately called “junk DNA”: 80% of the genome has “biochemical function.” “Almost every nucleotide is associated with a function of some sort or another, and we now know where they are, what binds to them, what their associations are, and more,” says Tom Gingeras, one of the ENCODE’s senior scientists. For an in-depth (and easy-to-parse) explanation, check out Not Exactly Rocket Science’s feature. [Discover Magazine]

A pair of mathematicians throws a wrench in Einstein’s theory of gravity

While an incomplete understanding how gravity works doesn’t put us in danger of floating off of our pale blue dot, it does help us understand how the rest of life, the universe and everything works, and that’s awesome. Today a couple of professors (one from Indiana University and the other from Sichuan University in China) announced that they’ve worked out a unified theory of dark matter and dark energy that alters Einstein’s calculations, asserting that “the law of energy and momentum conservation in spacetime is valid only when normal matter, dark matter and dark energy are all taken into account.” In other words, “we filled in the blanks, and now we know what’s up.” Previously, the accepted gravitational model only accounted for normal spacetime and matter, which preserved the conservation of mass and energy. No longer, they say, as 95% of the universe is composed of dark matter and energy, and must be accounted for. [Indiana University]

So… what are the odds of intelligent life existing elsewhere in the Milky Way?

Few topics have held the human imagination longer than the possibility of life somewhere beyond the exosphere. While the last couple of decades have brought us closer to understanding how that life might survive and evolve over there, we’re still woefully short of any indication that it actually exists. While we’re looking (or waiting for it to invade the planet to steal our women and dihydrogen monoxide), we can speculate about the likelihood that aliens live next door. [TED Blog]

And now a purely scientific look at orgasms

Put away your “I’m 12 and what is this.” DNews has announced a new miniseries of informative videos on the science of human orgasms. Will it make you more awesome in bed? Probably not. But at least you’ll have a fairly clinical understanding of what’s going on. Here’s Part I to get the party started. [Discovery News]

Modern Warfare Soldier Returns Home [Video Parody]

It’s terrible, sending our young, gamer-geek cadets out into cyberspace to fight, die and re-spawn, over and over again. It’s so inspiring to see them come back from their sofas, smelling like aged milk and enjoying real food with their families, after suffering their fast-food rations for far too long.

[Via College Humor]

Periodic Table Wall Graphics – with QR codes!

Artist Yiying Lu just sent me this really cool QR-enabled Periodic table of the Elements she recently created, which she is offering in PDF format for free on her website.

A smart kid with a smart phone and our new Periodic Table can learn the fundamentals of chemistry. My design includes 131 embedded QR links to applicable Wikipedia entries, directly connecting the ‘real-world’ version of the Periodic Table to a digital world of additional information – presented in what I hope is a clear, intuitive, and FUN design and interface!

[Yiying Lu]

R2-D2 Suitcase

Who better to have as a travelling companion than trusty old R2-D2?

I doubt this is actually an officially licensed Star Wars merchandise bag (hence why it’s called “robot trolley”) but it has four polycarbonate wheels – which means you can send it gliding down the slick tiles of a modern airport while making beeping noises. Then you can make robotic movements and pretend to be C-3PO. I’d totally do that.

[€76 from Salvador Bachiller | Via The Nerd Code]