Blind Fish's Sensors May Spur Development Of New Generation Of Active Sonar 
US Source: Underwatertimes 3/24/2009
Blind Fish's Sensors May Spur Development Of New Generation Of Active Sonar
A blind fish that has evolved a unique technique for sensing motion may inspire a new generation of sensors that perform better than current active sonar.

Although members of the fish species Astyanax fasciatus cannot see, they sense their environment and the movement of water around them with gel-covered hairs that extend from their bodies. Their ability to detect underwater objects and navigate through their lightless environment inspired a group of researchers to mimic the hairs of these blind cavefish in the laboratory.

While the fish use these hairs to detect obstacles, avoid predators and localize prey, researchers believe the engineered sensors they are developing could have a variety of underwater applications, such as port security, surveillance, early tsunami detection, autonomous oil rig inspection, autonomous underwater vehicle navigation, and marine research.
 

“These hair cells are like well-engineered mechanical sensors, similar to those that we use for balance and hearing in the human ear, where the deflection of the jelly-encapsulated hair cell measures important flow information,” said Vladimir Tsukruk, a professor in the Georgia Tech School of Materials Science and Engineering. “The hairs are better than active sonar, which requires a lot of space, sends out strong acoustic signals that can have a detrimental effect on the environment, and is inappropriate for stealth applications.”

In a presentation on March 20 at the American Physical Society meeting, researchers from Georgia Tech described their engineered motion detector that mimics the underwater flow measurements made by the blind cavefish. This research was sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4551Closed-pen salmon farm launches in B.C.CBC News2011-01-17CA
4552Meet the robotic ghost knifefish, the cyberfish who will tame the roiling seasgizmodo2011-01-19US
4553Chef creates meals featuring invasive Asian carpMilwaukee Journal Sentinel2011-01-23CA
4554Bass Angler Christiana Bradley Has Learning Experience In Floridaunderwatertimes2011-01-25US
4555Монстр из Ахтубыyandex2020-09-11RU
4556Young Islander builds ice fishing shack, hopes for winter catchesCBC News2021-02-21CA
4557Monduran monster's a world recordnews-mail2010-12-23AU
4558Wild Salmon Decline Was Not Caused By Sea Lice From Farm Salmonunderwatertimes2010-12-13US
4559Angler's 405.2-pound yellowfin tuna is largest ever caughtpetethomasoutdoors2010-12-06US
4560Angler lands world's biggest carp... the day after best friend caught another huge fish on same lakedailymail2010-12-06FR
4561Washington fish hatchery research shows circular tanks result in buff salmon and steelheadoregonlive2010-01-10US
4562Freshwater fish are in "catastrophic" decline with one-third facing extinction, report findscbsnews2021-02-23GR
4563Waves of fish mortalities attributed to cold weatherkristv2021-02-19US
4564Fish farms stir emotionscastanet2021-02-20CA
4565The feeding of the 5,000? Not quite, but pensioner lands record-breaking halibutdaily mail2010-11-23UK
4566Fish Are More Intelligent Than Previously ThoughtUnderwatertimes2010-11-16US
4567The amazing sight of a salmon leaping up the River Derwent spotted for the first time in 200 yearsdaily mail2010-11-12UK
4568Goldfish join security team for G20 summit as water testersmetro2010-11-09KR
4569Fish Courtship More Complex Than Thought; Ugly Becomes Attractive If Females Are Few And Far BetweenUnderwatertimes2010-11-10AU
4570Ecologists Get Fish Eye View Of Sexual Signals; 'New Insights Into How Females May Use Color To Choose The Best Mates'Underwatertimes2010-11-09US
4571Virginia fisherman stop in Alabama while attempting to ‘Fish All 50’WSFA2021-02-22US
4572'Moderate livelihood' fishermen must operate during commercial season, DFO saysCBC News2021-03-03CA
4573Why Scientists Just Ran Numbers on All The Fish Poop in The World's Oceanssciencealert2021-02-19CA
4574Volga River Towns Fade Along With Prized Sturgeonnpr2010-11-05RU
4575NOAA Policy Encourages Catch Shares To End Overfishing And Rebuild Fisheries; 'An Effective Tool'Underwatertimes2010-11-04US

219 220 221 182 of [222 - pages.]