Researchers Develop Flow Sensors Based on Blind Fish Hair Structures

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Summaries

Summary Sentence:

Researchers are engineering blind fish motion sensors in the lab

Full Summary:

The fish species Astyanax fasciatus cannot see, but their unique technique for sensing the movement of water around them with gel-covered hairs that extend from their bodies may inspire a new generation of sensors that perform better than active sonar.

Media
  • Astyanax fasciatus Astyanax fasciatus
    (image/jpeg)
  • Blind cavefish hair cupula Blind cavefish hair cupula
    (image/jpeg)
  • Gel-coated hair sensor Gel-coated hair sensor
    (image/jpeg)

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.

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Categories
Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Engineering, Life Sciences and Biology, Research
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Keywords
Astyanax, blind, cave, cupula, detection, fasciatus, fish, motion, movement, sensor, sonar
Status
  • Created By: Abby Vogel Robinson
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Mar 23, 2009 - 8:00pm
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 11:03pm