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
1176Millions of dead fish have washed up in a river near an Australian townCNN2023-03-19AU
1177Britains fish populations are in a deeply troubling statetheguardian2023-09-13UK
1178Has the Brexit fishing promise come true?BBC News2023-12-06UK
1179Electricity from electric eels may transfer genetic material to nearby animalsphys2023-12-05JP
1180Is Norway’s farmed salmon as healthy as we think?Radio Sweden2019-06-13NO
1181Wild salmon conservation group raises concerns about herring kills at B.C. fish farmsyahoo2023-12-05US
1182Fish such as the steelhead Crossword Cluetryhardguides2023-12-03US
1183Harmful ‘forever chemicals’ found in freshwater fishyahoo2023-12-01US
1184B.C. salmon farms linked to explosive spike in wild fish deathsvancouverisawesome2023-12-05CA
1185Advocates, salmon farm industry at odds over B.C. herring deathsGlobal News2023-12-05CA
1186How salmon fishing helped me embrace my Alaska Native identitytheguardian2023-11-20UK
1187Fish out of water: North American drought bakes salmonmongabay2023-11-20US
1188Fish escapes death twice in 1 second -- from bird, lizardupi2023-11-20UP
11892 rare baby mola fish spotted swimming together off Canada's Pacific coasthindustantimes2023-11-22CA
1190Terrible parents, skilled dancers, fearsome huntersnst2023-11-18US
1191Fishing mentors wanted for teens who would like to learn anglingABC Central Victoria2023-11-18AU
1192Wisconsin Wildlife Officials Capture 100s of Invasive Carp in Mississippi RiverAssociated Press2023-12-04US
1193Осенняя заготовка налимаohotniki2023-12-03RU
1194Shipwrecks sanctuary for fish escaping trawlersBBC News2023-11-23US
1195Tecumseh to host 2024 Hobie Fishing World Championshipwindsor ctvnews2023-12-04CA
1196The fish we cannot seenationalobserver2023-12-01US
1197Eel guts, salmon bloodpressherald2023-11-12US
1198A fish cartel for Africa could benefit the countries, and their seasucsb2023-11-13US
1199Не ищите причин не ехать на рыбалкуohotniki2023-11-30RU
1200Frisch: Prime Time Walleyesechopress2023-12-01US

219 220 221 47 of [222 - pages.]