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LOCOMOTION

The bow leg hopping robot

Bryan L. Brown, Garth Zeglin

Year
2002
Citations
178

Abstract

The bow leg hopper is a novel locomotion design with a highly resilient leg that resembles an archer's bow. During the flight a "thrust" actuator adds elastic energy to the leg, which is automatically released during stance to control hopping height. Lateral motion is controlled by directing the leg angle at touchdown, which determines the angle of takeoff or reflection. The leg pivots freely on a hip bearing, and is automatically decoupled from the leg-angle positioner during stance to preclude hip torques that would disturb body attitude. Upright attitude is maintained without active control by allowing the body to "hang" from the hip joint. Preliminary experiments with a planar prototype have demonstrated impressive performance, high efficiency, and low power requirements. Current experiments are focused on developing control and planning schemes to enable locomotion over discrete "stepping stones" and obstacles.

Keywords

TouchdownTorqueThrustComputer scienceSimulationTakeoffRobotActuatorControl theory (sociology)Physics

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