• Bookmark the Merlin Warez Blog for service interuption notices and updates https://www.merlinwz.wordpress.com
  • For privacy we allow and encourage all members to use a VPN
  • It takes only seconds to show appreciation to our World Class Uploaders with a Like

Flying Microchips The Size Of A Sand Grain Could Be Used For Population Surveillance

dvernb

Gifted One
Staff member
S MOD
FELLOW
VIP
PATRON
POSTER
PUBLIC
TENURE
Joined
Apr 16, 2021
Messages
1,295
Points
530
Location
Perched on a rock in Canada
It's neither a bird nor a plane, but a winged microchip as small as a grain of sand that can be carried by the wind as it monitors such things as pollution levels or the spread of airborne diseases.

The tiny mic:ROFLMAO:iers, whose development by engineers at Northwestern University was detailed in an article published by Nature this week, are being billed as the smallest-ever human-made flying structures.


Tiny fliers that can gather information about their surroundings


The devices don't have a motor, but engineers were instead inspired by the maple tree's free-falling propeller seeds — technically known as samara fruit. They optimized the aerodynamics of the mic:ROFLMAO:iers so that "as these structures fall through the air, the interaction between the air and those wings cause a rotational motion that creates a very stable, slow, falling velocity," said John A. Rogers, who led the development of the devices.

"That allows these structures to interact for extended periods with ambient wind that really enhances the dispersal process," said the professor of materials science and engineering, biomedical engineering and neurological surgery at Northwestern.

The wind would scatter the tiny microchips, which could sense their surrounding environments and collect information. The scientists say they could potentially be use to monitor for contamination, surveil populations or even track diseases.
Their creators foresee mic:ROFLMAO:iers becoming part of "large distributed collections of miniaturized, wireless electronic devices." In other words, they could look like a swarm.

Although the size and engineering of the mic:ROFLMAO:iers is unique, we reported on the development of similar "microdrones" in March. The concept has also found its way to the dystopian science-fiction series Black Mirror.

But unlike maple seeds, the engineers needed to slow down the descent of their mic:ROFLMAO:iers to give them more time to collect data. Team member Yonggang Huang developed a computer model that calculated the best design for the mic:ROFLMAO:iers to fall slowly and disperse widely.

"This is impossible with trial-and-error experiments," Huang said.

The team also drew inspiration from pop-up books for children for the construction of such tiny devices.

The engineers first created a base and then bonded it to "a slightly stretchy rubber substrate," according to the Northwestern news release. When relaxed, that substrate pops up into a precise three-dimensional shape.

"We think that we beat nature," Rogers said. "At least in the narrow sense that we have been able to build structures that fall with more stable trajectories and at slower terminal velocities than equivalent seeds that you would see from plants or trees."

Code:
https://www.npr.org/2021/09/23/1040035430/flying-microchip-sand-grain-northwestern-winged

 



 

Gethin

Charismatic Member
PATRON
POSTER
PUBLIC
TENURE
Joined
Nov 17, 2020
Messages
1,527
Points
430
This cannot be good for anyone other than Big Brother. Least of all nature. I imagine it would become part of the diet of many species of land, sea and air fauna inevitably entering our food chain.

Science for the sake of “beating nature” is beyond mad science. It’s hubris on a pathological scale.

All things considered this is just another step on the path of destruction wrought by man on the planet.

 

splitinfinitive

Verified Member
PUBLIC
Joined
Jun 16, 2021
Messages
109
Points
0
Age
75
If one fell on my sandwich and I accidentally ate it the resulting pictures may make a few snoopers consider a career change....

 
Top