Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and University of Michigan have developed the world's smallest fully autonomous robots, measuring approximately 200 micrometers (smaller than a grain of salt) and costing about one cent each. These micro-robots are solar-powered, carrying their own computer, sensors, and power generation system, and can make autonomous decisions by sensing temperature changes in their environment and adjusting their movement accordingly. Unlike previous micro-scale machines that could only move, these robots can independently decide where to go. The core technical achievement is integrating a complete computer into a sub-millimeter device, which took decades to accomplish. Current applications include clinical trials for eye surgery, with potential future uses for monitoring individual cells for disease and navigating spaces too small for existing instruments.
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The World's Smallest Autonomous Robot Is Already in Clinical TrialsAdded:
Researchers at the universities of Pennsylvania and Michigan just built the world's smallest fully autonomous robots. Each one is smaller than a grain of salt, about 200 micrometers across, and they cost roughly a penny to make, 1 cent each. And what makes them different from everything that came before is they don't need a wire, no remote control, no magnetic field, and no human guiding them in real time. They carry their own computer, their own sensors, and their own way of generating power. They're solar-powered. Light hits a tiny solar cell on the robot surface and it moves.
Previous micro-scale machines could move, but they couldn't decide. These can decide for themselves. They sense temperature changes in their environment and they adjust where they're going based on that. The lead researcher at Penn put it this way. They've made autonomous robots 10,000 times smaller than what existed before. The applications researchers are pointing to include monitoring individual cells for disease and navigating spaces too small for any existing instrument. Penn is already running clinical trials using them in eye surgery. Right now, this is still in early-stage research. Deep tissue applications require solving the light delivery problem. Light doesn't pass through the body the way it passes through water, but the core technical barrier, which is putting a complete computer into something sub-millimeter, is cleared. That's the part that took decades to do. Sources are in the description and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe for more AI and robotics news.
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