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Dynamics of geckos running vertically

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TLDR
Differential leg function appears essential for effective vertical as well as horizontal locomotion, and the period of fore–aft force production might be constrained.
Abstract
Geckos with adhesive toe pads rapidly climb even smooth vertical surfaces. We challenged geckos (Hemidactylus garnotii) to climb up a smooth vertical track that contained a force platform. Geckos climbed vertically at up to 77·cm·s ‐1 with a stride frequency of 15·Hz using a trotting gait. During each step, whole body fore‐aft, lateral and normal forces all decreased to zero when the animal attached or detached its toe pads. Peak fore‐aft force was twice body weight at mid-step. Geckos climbed at a constant average velocity without generating decelerating forces on their center of mass in the direction of motion. Although mass-specific mechanical power to climb was ten times the value expected for level running, the total mechanical energy of climbing was only 5‐11% greater than the potential energy change. Fore- and hindlegs both pulled toward the midline, possibly loading the attachment mechanisms. Attachment and detachment of feet occupied 13% and 37% of stance time, respectively. As climbing speed increased, the absolute time required to attach and detach did not decrease, suggesting that the period of fore‐aft force production might be constrained. During ascent, the forelegs pulled toward, while hindlegs pushed away from the vertical surface, generating a net pitching moment toward the surface to counterbalance pitch-back away from the surface. Differential leg function appears essential for effective vertical as well as horizontal locomotion. Summary

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Journal ArticleDOI

Frictional adhesion: A new angle on gecko attachment.

TL;DR: The frictional adhesion model provides an explanation for the very low detachment forces observed in climbing geckos that does not depend on toe peeling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smooth Vertical Surface Climbing With Directional Adhesion

TL;DR: The design and fabrication methods used to create underactuated, multimaterial structures that conform to surfaces over a range of length scales from centimeters to micrometers are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adhesion and friction in gecko toe attachment and detachment.

TL;DR: Both the adhesion and friction forces of geckos can be changed over three orders of magnitude, allowing for the swift attachment and detachment during gecko motion, and have obvious implications for the fabrication of dry adhesives and robotic systems inspired by the gecko's locomotion mechanism.
Journal IssueDOI

Biologically inspired climbing with a hexapedal robot

TL;DR: The design process is described and specifically addresses body morphology, hierarchical compliance in the legs and feet, and sensing and control systems that enable robust and reliable climbing on difficult surfaces that demonstrate the robot's ability to climb reliably for long distances.
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Biorobotics: Using robots to emulate and investigate agile locomotion

TL;DR: The goals of biorobotics are to take inspiration from biological principles to design robots that match the agility of animals, and to use robots as scientific tools to investigate animal adaptive behavior.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Adhesive force of a single gecko foot-hair

TL;DR: The first direct measurements of single setal force are reported by using a two-dimensional micro-electro-mechanical systems force sensor and a wire as a force gauge and revealed that a seta is ten times more effective at adhesion than predicted from maximal estimates on whole animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for van der Waals adhesion in gecko setae

TL;DR: This work provides the first direct experimental evidence for dry adhesion of gecko setae by van der Waals forces, and suggests a possible design principle underlying the repeated, convergent evolution of dry adhesive microstructures in gecko, anoles, skinks, and insects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical work in terrestrial locomotion: two basic mechanisms for minimizing energy expenditure

TL;DR: During running, trotting, hopping, and galloping, the power per unit weight required to maintain the forward speed of the center of mass is almost the same in all the species studied and the sum of these two powers is almost a linear function of speed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Templates and anchors: neuromechanical hypotheses of legged locomotion on land.

TL;DR: Anchored templates of many-legged, sprawled-postured animals suggest that passive, dynamic self-stabilization from a feedforward, tuned mechanical system can reject rapid perturbations and simplify control.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mechanics of running: How does stiffness couple with speed?

TL;DR: A mathematical model for terrestrial running is presented, based on a leg with the properties of a simple spring, which shows that at high forward speed, KLEG is a nearly linear function of both U and V, while the effective vertical stiffness is a quadratic function of U.
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