Thursday, April 30, 2015

The Robot Zoo



The Space and Rocket center has an area dedicated to traveling exhibits which change throughout the year.  The exhibit now on display is called The Robot Zoo.  



The 5,000-square-foot exhibit reveals the magic of nature as a master engineer. Eight robot animals and more than a dozen hands-on activities illustrate fascinating real-life characteristics, such as how a chameleon changes colors, a giant squid propels itself and a fly walks on the ceiling.

The larger-than-life-size animated robots include a chameleon, a rhinoceros, a giant squid with 18-foot tentacles and a platypus. Also featured are a house fly with a 10-foot wingspread, a grasshopper, a bat and a giraffe whose head and neck alone stretch 9 feet tall.  

Cutaways expose the animals' insides as a host of easily recognizable machine parts and gadgets, such as shock absorbers and pumps, that demonstrate what makes animals work. By comparing anatomy, environments and size of the actual creatures to the mechanic counterparts, The Robot Zoo provides fantastic new insights and hands-on fun for discovering just how animals work.















At The Robot Zoo, the students had time to explore the biomechanics of complex animal robots.  They were able to discover how real animals work.















This was an neat exhibit on camouflage.


Here's Eddie!                                           Now you see him,                            now you don't!








No comments:

Post a Comment