Iranian analysts at the University of Tehran revealed yesterday the most recent era of their humanoid robot, named Surena III. In an exhibit, the grown-up measured robot strolled over a stage, imitated a man's arm signals, and remained on one foot while twisting in reverse.
Dr. Aghil Yousefi-Koma, an educator of mechanical building who drives the Surena venture, tells IEEE Spectrum that the robot is composed as an examination stage to investigate bipedal velocity, human-robot connection, and different difficulties in apply autonomy. He likewise trusts Surena can demonstrate the significance of building professions to understudies and people in general, including that he sees the robot as an image of innovation headway "toward peace and humankind."
With a smooth plastic packaging and brilliant LED eyes, Surena III is 1.9 meters (6 feet 3 inches) tall and tips the scales at 98 kilograms (216 lbs). It's furnished with a large group of sensors, including a Kinect-based 3D vision module, and its joints are controlled by 31 servomotors. The control programming running on the robot and an observing framework utilized by human administrators to direct its capacities depend on the famous Robot Operating System, or ROS.






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