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Imitating animal and plant inventions...
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Biomimicry is also considered to be a discipline closely related to cybernetics, which is mainly a discipline that compares life phenomena with mechanical principles for study and interpretation.
The creatures on earth, whether they are microorganisms, plants or animals, are the "strongest" that have survived through hundreds of millions of years of natural selection, and many of their own traits have undoubtedly evolved to a fairly perfect degree in order to adapt to the surrounding environment.
When we design robots, in addition to using our imagination to invent and create, we can also use some excellent characteristics of living organisms, which is what bionics researches.
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Biomimicry, the science of building technological devices in imitation of living things, is a new marginal science that emerged only in the middle of the last century. Biomimicry studies the structure, function and working principles of living things, transplants these principles into engineering technology, invents instruments, devices and machines with superior performance, and creates new technologies. From the birth and development of bionics to just a few decades now, its research results have been very impressive.
The advent of biomimicry has opened up a unique path of technological development, that is, the road to ask for a blueprint from the biological world, which has greatly broadened people's horizons and shown strong vitality.
Directory. Basic facts of biomimicry.
The origin of human biomimicry.
Thought-provoking contrasts.
The birth of biomimicry.
Research methodology and content.
Biomimicry research scope.
Biomimicry examples: bats vs. radar?
From fireflies to artificial cold light.
Electric fish with volt batteries.
Downwind ears of jellyfish.
Skill training giraffe and astronaut lifeless reproduction.
Eggshell and thin-shell construction.
Structural members. Zebra.
Insects and biomimicry.
Butterflies and biomimicry.
Beetles and biomimicry.
Dragonflies and biomimicry.
Flies and biomimicry.
Bees and biomimicry.
Other insects and biomimicry.
A brief table of biomimicry phenomena.
The latest developments in bionics.
Biomimicry in foreign languages and English.
Latin. Basic facts of biomimicry.
The origin of human biomimicry.
Thought-provoking contrasts.
The birth of biomimicry.
Research methodology and content.
Biomimicry research scope.
Biomimicry examples: bats vs. radar?
From fireflies to artificial cold light.
Electric fish with volt batteries.
Downwind ears of jellyfish.
Skill training giraffe and astronaut lifeless reproduction.
Eggshell and thin-shell construction.
Structural members Zebra.
Insects and biomimicry.
Butterflies and biomimicry.
Beetles and biomimicry.
Dragonflies and biomimicry.
Flies and biomimicry.
Bees and biomimicry.
Other insects and biomimicry.
A brief table of biomimicry phenomena.
The latest developments in bionics are foreign languages in bionics.
English Latin.
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Sonar, radar, artificial cold light (firefly), nylon buckle (Xanthella).
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Fly --- small gas analyzer.
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