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Space

Copycat Russian android prepares to do the spacewalk

By Jacob Aron

29 November 2013

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

(Image: Mikhail Pochuyev/Photas/Tass/PA)

This robot is looking pretty pleased with itself – and wouldn’t you be, if you were off to the International Space Station? Prototype cosmobot SAR-401, with its human-like torso, is designed to service the outside of the ISS by mimicking the arm and finger movements of a human puppet-master indoors.

In this picture, that’s the super-focussed guy in the background but in space it would be a cosmonaut operating from the relative safety of the station’s interior and so avoiding a risky spacewalk. You can watch the Russian android mirroring a human here.

SAR-1 joins a growing zoo of robots in space. NASA already has its own Robonaut on board the ISS to carry out routine maintenance tasks. It was recently joined by a small, cute Japanese robot, Kirobo, but neither of the station’s droids are designed for outside use.

Until SAR-401 launches, the station’s external Dextre and Canadarm2 rule the orbital roost. They were commemorated on Canadian banknotes this year – and they don’t even have faces.

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