Monday, March 17, 2014

Soft robotic fish moves like the real thing

Autonomous, self-contained soft robotic fish at MIT

From MIT news

Soft robots — which don’t just have soft exteriors but are also powered by fluid flowing through flexible channels — have become a sufficiently popular research topic that they now have their own journal, Soft Robotics.
In the first issue of that journal, out this month, MIT researchers report the first self-contained autonomous soft robot capable of rapid body motion: a “fish” that can execute an escape maneuver, convulsing its body to change direction in just a fraction of a second, or almost as quickly as a real fish can.

“We’re excited about soft robots for a variety of reasons,” says Daniela Rus, a professor of computer science and engineering, director of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and one of the researchers who designed and built the fish.
“As robots penetrate the physical world and start interacting with people more and more, it’s much easier to make robots safe if their bodies are so wonderfully soft that there’s no danger if they whack you.”

Another reason to study soft robots, Rus says, is that “with soft machines, the whole robotic planning problem changes.”
In most robotic motion-planning systems, avoiding collisions with the environment is the highest priority.
That frequently leads to inefficient motion, because the robot has to settle for collision-free trajectories that it can find quickly.

With soft robots, collision poses little danger to either the robot or the environment.
“In some cases, it is actually advantageous for these robots to bump into the environment, because they can use these points of contact as means of getting to the destination faster,” Rus says.

But the new robotic fish was designed to explore yet a third advantage of soft robots: “The fact that the body deforms continuously gives these machines an infinite range of configurations, and this is not achievable with machines that are hinged,” Rus says.
The continuous curvature of the fish’s body when it flexes is what allows it to change direction so quickly.
“A rigid-body robot could not do continuous bending,” she says.


Escape velocity

The robotic fish was built by Andrew Marchese, a graduate student in MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and lead author on the new paper, where he’s joined by Rus and postdoc Cagdas D. Onal.
Each side of the fish’s tail is bored through with a long, tightly undulating channel.
Carbon dioxide released from a canister in the fish’s abdomen causes the channel to inflate, bending the tail in the opposite direction.

Each half of the fish tail has just two control parameters: the diameter of the nozzle that releases gas into the channel and the amount of time it’s left open.
In experiments, Marchese found that the angle at which the fish changes direction — which can be as extreme as 100 degrees — is almost entirely determined by the duration of inflation, while its speed is almost entirely determined by the nozzle diameter.
That “decoupling” of the two parameters, he says, is something that biologists had observed in real fish.
“To be honest, that’s not something I designed for,” Marchese says. “I designed for it to look like a fish, but we got the same inherent parameter decoupling that real fish have.”

That points to yet another possible application of soft robotics, Rus says, in biomechanics.
“If you build an artificial creature with a particular bio-inspired behavior, perhaps the solution for the engineered behavior could serve as a hypothesis for understanding whether nature might do it in the same way,” she says.

Marchese built the fish in Rus’ lab, where other researchers are working on printable robotics.
He used the lab’s 3-D printer to build the mold in which he cast the fish’s tail and head from silicone rubber and the polymer ring that protects the electronics in the fish’s guts.



A new flexible robotic fish is the first soft robot
with an onboard power source that can move its body at high speed

The long haul

The fish can perform 20 or 30 escape maneuvers, depending on their velocity and angle, before it exhausts its carbon dioxide canister.
But the comparatively simple maneuver of swimming back and forth across a tank drains the canister quickly.
“The fish was designed to explore performance capabilities, not long-term operation,” Marchese says. “Next steps for future research are taking that system and building something that’s compromised on performance a little bit but increases longevity.”

A new version of the fish that should be able to swim continuously for around 30 minutes will use pumped water instead of carbon dioxide to inflate the channels, but otherwise, it will use the same body design, Marchese says.
Rus envisions that such a robot could infiltrate schools of real fish to gather detailed information about their behavior in the natural habitat.

“All of our algorithms and control theory are pretty much designed with the idea that we’ve got rigid systems with defined joints,” says Barry Trimmer, a biology professor at Tufts University who specializes in biomimetic soft robots.
“That works really, really well as long as the world is pretty predictable. If you’re in a world that is not — which, to be honest, is everywhere outside a factory situation — then you start to lose some of your advantage.”

The premise of soft robotics, Trimmer says, is that “if we learn how to incorporate all these other sorts of materials whose response you can’t predict exactly, if we can learn to engineer that to deal with the uncertainty and still be able to control the machines, then we’re going to have much better machines.”

The MIT researchers’ robot fish “is a great demonstration of that principle,” Trimmer says. “It’s an early stage of saying, ‘We know the actuator isn’t giving us all the control we’d like, but can we actually still exploit it to get the performance we want?’ And they’re able to show that yes, they can.”

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Hammerhead shark swarm



It's just a regular dive off the coast of Mozambique -- a dolphin pod here, a few kingfish there -- until a swarm (and we mean dozens!) of hammerhead sharks show up (01:24).
Here's what it's like to find yourself surrounded by hammerheads!
The distinctive-looking sharks are highly threatened by the fin trade, so it's special to see them converge in such large numbers.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Expedition to the end of the world - Official trailer

A grand, adventurous journey to the last uncharted areas of the globe.
Yet no matter how far we go, and how hard we try to find the answer, the ultimate meeting is with ourselves and our own transience.

Photographer: Simon Rubardo

Synopsis :
A real adventure film – for the 21st century.
On a three-mast schooner packed with artists, scientists and ambitions worthy of Noah or Columbus, we set off for the end of the world: the rapidly melting massifs of North-East Greenland.
An epic journey where the brave sailors on board encounter polar bear nightmares, Stone Age playgrounds and entirely new species.
But in their encounter with new, unknown parts of the world, the crew of scientist and artists also confronted the existential questions of life.


Curiosity, grand pathos and a liberating dose of humour come together in a superbly orchestrated film where one iconic image after the other seduces us far beyond the historical footnote that is humanity.
A film conceived and brought to life on a grand scale  - a long forgotten childhood dream lived out by grown artists and scientists.

Friday, March 14, 2014

The secret to holding your breath for 20 minutes


Freediving How to hold your breath longer - Breathe up techniques

From io9

Illusionist and stunt performer Harry Houdini was famously capable of holding his breath for over three minutes.
But today, competitive breath-hold divers can squeeze ten, fifteen, even twenty minutes out of a single lungful of air.
How do these divers do it — and how can you train to hold your breath for longer?


World class waterman, surfer and free diver, Mark Healey talks about letting go.

"My best static breath hold is pretty crap," says surfer Mark Healey in an article on breath-holding from the September 2011 issue of Surfer Magazine.
"I think it's about 5:30."
If that sounds like a long time to you, that’s because it is, and Healey is being modest (some would say irresponsibly so).


Martin Stepanek - the world top freediver in a film by Mirek Hrdy.
A sample from the legendary film about the Czech freediving team and Martin's attempt to break the world record during the world freediving championship in Hawaii.

But to the world’s foremost practitioners of "static apnea" – a competitive discipline in the sport of freediving in which a person holds his or her breath underwater, without moving, for as long as possible – five minutes is small change.
In 2001, renowned freediver Martin Štěpánek held his breath for a then-unprecedented 8 minutes 6 seconds.
His record stood for nearly three years, until June of 2004, when freediver Tom Sietas bested it by 41 seconds with a time of 8:47.
The record has since been broken eight times (five of them by Sietas, himself), but the title currently belongs to French freediver Stéphane Mifsud.


Stephane Mifsud free diver

In 2009, Mifsud spent a lung-searing 11 minutes 35 seconds below water on a single gulp of air.
Static apnea is the only discipline in freediving measured in units of time, but it is arguably the purest manifestation of the sport.
It is also, inarguably, the skill most essential to the practice of the seven other sea- and pool-based disciplines officially recognized by the International Association for Development of Apnea, or "AIDA," the global sanctioning body for competitive breath-holding events. 

These events include "No Limit" (the "absolute depth" discipline, whereby the freediver descends with the help of a ballast weight and ascends via a method of her choice) and "Dynamic Without Fins" (whereby the freediver travels in a horizontal position under water attempting to cover the greatest possible distance in the absence of propulsive aids), and are measured in units of depth and distance.
Other events allow for the use of fins, ropes, weights, sleds and even specialized vests with inflatable compartments, but every single one boils down to the athlete's ability to make the most that he or she can out of a single breath’s worth of oxygen.

The Secret to Holding Your Breath for 20 Minutes
Above: A freediver with his safety diver, competing in the AIDA category of "Dynamic With Fins" (DYN) at the 2nd Great Camberwell Breath Hold Freediving Competition held in London on 31 May 2009 | Photo and Caption
Credit: Jayhem via flickr
 
Freedivers subject themselves to years of training to achieve such breath-defying feats.
In the process, they actually modify their biology.
The oxygen you breathe is transferred to your blood and delivered to the various tissues of your body, where it is converted into energy.
The waste product of this process is CO2, which is carried back to the lungs and released from the body upon exhalation.
When you hold your breath, O2 is still converted to CO2, but the latter has nowhere to go.
It recirculates in your veins, acidifying your blood and signaling your body to breathe, first with a burning sensation in your lungs, and eventually in the form of strong, painful spasms of your diaphragm.
The blood of a seasoned free diver has been shown to acidify more slowly than those of us who spend our lives inhaling and exhaling reflexively.
Activation of the sympathetic nervous system causes their peripheral blood vessels to contract soon after they stop breathing, thereby conserving oxygen-rich blood by redirecting it from the extremities to the vital organs, especially the brain and heart.
Many freedivers also practice meditation to literally calm their hearts.
Reducing the body’s metabolic rate attenuates the conversion of oxygen to CO2.
Meditation has a calming effect on the mind, as well; much of the battle, when holding one’s breath, is mental.
To know, logically, that your body can persist on the oxygen already available to it.
To ignore outright the mind and body’s compulsion to breathe. 

There are other tricks to holding one’s breath that rely less on extended training and more on increasing what divers refer to as one’s “total gas storage.”
Take “buccal pumping,” for instance, which was developed by spear-fishing breath-holders long ago and introduced to sport diving by U.S. Navy diver Robert Croft in the 1960s.

Also known as “lung packing,” buccal packing involves taking the deepest breath possible, then using oral and pharyngeal muscles, along with the glottis, to hold the throat shut while shunting air, cheekfulls at a time, from the mouth down into the lungs.
It’s been said that by repeating this pumping movement up to 50 times, a diver can increase his total lung capacity by as much as three liters. 

A 2003 study that measured the lung capacity of a breath-hold diver gives a more conservative figure, noting an increase following buccal pumping from 9.28 liters to 11.02.
Lung capacity can also vary considerably from person-to-person: The average lung capacity is 4 liters for women and six for men, though acclaimed free diver Herbert Nitsch has a reported lung capacity of 14 liters.
Then there’s hyperventilating, which divers often do to flush their systems of CO2 and pre-load their bodies, instead, with unconverted oxygen.
The most extreme version of this technique involves breathing nothing but pure O2 for as much as 30 minutes before submerging one’s head beneath the water.
The air we breathe is only about 21% oxygen (the rest is mostly nitrogen), which means that a breath held on atmospheric air will last significantly shorter than one held on pure O2.


 In this highly personal talk from TEDMED, magician and stuntman David Blaine describes what it took to hold his breath underwater for 17 minutes -- a world record (only two minutes shorter than this entire talk!) -- and what his often death-defying work means to him.

This technique was how magician David Blaine managed to break the world-record for breath-holding in 2008, with a time of 17 minutes and 4 seconds, and how Stig Severinsen blew that time out of the water in 2012, with a mind-blowing performance of 22 minutes.
(It bears mentioning that “static apnea,” as discussed earlier, is defined by AIDA, and so is distinguished from the Guinness World Record for “breath holding underwater,” which allows for the use of pure oxygen in preparation.)

Stig Severinsen - 22 Minutes Guinness World Record breath hold

All of these techniques and training methods carry with them a significant risk to one’s safety. Exceeding the limits of oxygen deprivation can lead to loss of consciousness or even to death, while extended exposure to pure oxygen carries its own set of risks.
Hyperventilating can cause you to pass out, and there is evidence that suggests buccal-pumping can actually cause your lungs to rupture.
It is for these reasons that freedivers rarely practice breath-holding unsupervised, or in or around even shallow water; after all: when you’re blacked out, it doesn’t matter how deep the water is.
 

Nicholas Mevoli's life and death reflect the spirit, and dangers, of a niche sport that has grown exponentially.

The jury is still out on whether repeated bouts of extended apnea is hazardous to your brain in the long term, but it should still give budding breath-holders pause to know that death is not unknown to freediving. 
The sport’s last major loss occurred last November, when 32-year-old Nicholas Mevoli died while attempting a record-setting free-dive of 236 feet.
He was underwater for 3 minutes and 38 seconds, and while he returned to the surface by his own power, he lost conscious shortly after surfacing and was pronounced dead soon thereafter.

Studies that predict future performance in competitive diving claim that there’s still a ways to go before the physiological limits of the sport are met, noting that current training methods and strategies suggest that duration can be prolonged still further.
AIDA’s official statement claimed that Mevoli’s death was the first in more than 20 years of its competitions.
Given the pursuit of that 15-minute barrier, and other, more extreme diving performances, it’s hard to believe that his will be the last.

Links :
  • YouTube : the yogi art of breathing less than normal (hypoventilation)

Thursday, March 13, 2014

US NOAA update in the Marine GeoGarage

As our public viewer is not yet available
(currently under construction, upgrading to Google Maps API v3 as v2 is officially no more supported),
this info is primarily intended to our iPhone/iPad universal mobile application users

(Marine US on the App Store)
and also to our B2B customers which use our nautical charts layers in their own webmapping applications through our GeoGarage API.

13 charts have been updated in the Marine GeoGarage
(NOAA update February 2014)

  • 11331 ed22 Intracoastal Waterway Ellender to Galveston Bay
  • 11470 ed40 Fort Lauderdale Port Everglades
  • 11472 ed36 Intracoastal Waterway Palm Shores to West Palm Beach;Loxahatchee River
  • 12221 ed82 Chesapeake Bay Entrance
  • 12231 ed30 Chesapeake Bay Tangier Sound Northern Part
  • 12235 ed34 Chesapeake Bay Rappahannock River Entrance. Piankatank and Great Wicomico Rivers
  • 12280 ed11 Chesapeake Bay
  • 13214 ed30 Fishers Island Sound
  • 14865 ed17 South End of Lake Huron
  • 14966 ed28 Little Girls Point to Silver Bay. including Duluth and Apostle Islands;Cornucopia Harbor;Port Wing Harbor;Knife River Harbor;Two Harbors
  • 14973 ed28 Apostle Islands. including Chequamegan Bay; Bayfield Harbor;Pikes Bay Harbor;La Pointe Harbor
  • 14974 ed25 Ashland and Washburn harbors
  • 25650 ed37 Virgin Passage and Sonda de Vieques
Today 1025 NOAA raster charts (2167 including sub-charts) are included in the Marine GeoGarage viewer (see PDFs files)

Note : GeoGarage blog : Great Lakes mariners get new NOAA nautical chart for St. Mary’s River


How do you know if you need a new nautical chart?
See the changes in new chart editions.
NOAA chart dates of recent Print on Demand editions

Note : NOAA updates their nautical charts with corrections published in:
  • U.S. Coast Guard Local Notices to Mariners (LNMs),
  • National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency Notices to Mariners (NMs), and
  • Canadian Coast Guard Notices to Mariners (CNMs)
While information provided by this Web site is intended to provide updated nautical charts, it must not be used as a substitute for the United States Coast Guard, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, or Canadian Coast Guard Notice to Mariner publications

Please visit the
NOAA's chart update service for more info.