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Physics World July 2021

Physics World July 2021

Natural born movers: the plants that are inspiring robotic limbs

To replicate the wonders of the human hand, researchers in the field of “soft robotics” are trying to design artificial structures made from flexible, compliant materials that can be controlled and programmed by computers. Designers seeking to make their structures move are finding inspiration from a surprising source: the study of movement in plants. As Daniel Rayneau-Kirkhope explains in this issue, one strange-looking plant – the Cape sundew – could hold the key to soft, robotic limbs. Also this month: an interview with Nobel laureate James Peebles, the cosmic challenge for supercomputers and a conversation with Catherine Heymans, Scotland’s astronomer royal.

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Catherine Haymans news

New leader for Scottish astronomy

Illustration of sheep with a wolf's shadow opinion

Beware of the ‘alliars’

opinion

Bridging the language divide

bookkeeping cartoon opinion

Tax benefits

James Peebles interview

A cosmic adventure

patient receiving vaccination opinion

Vaccination reluctance

venus flytrap feature

Replicating how plants move

supercomputer and rays of light feature

Supercomputers face a cosmic challenge

Sample pages from Nano showing an elephant walking on a graphene tightrope review

It’s the little things

M S Zobaer careers

Making the switch

Helgoland review

No man is an island

high jump lateral thoughts

Sporting chance

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