14 research outputs found
日本の本州中部山北地域の島弧―島弧衝突帯における深層掘削
We carried out borehole drilling in the Yamakita area near an active fault of the arc-arc collision zone in the western part of Kanagawa Prefecture. Slime and core samples were obtained. The borehole geology was established by examined them using petrographic analyses and geophysical logging data. We found that the southwestern slope of Mt. Maruyama was down-faulted from the northern slope of the mountain by an unknown fault. After drilling was completed, the borehole was established as a Hi-net seismic observation station. Data are collected by the Hi-net observation system and made available through the INTERNET
Insect Muscular Tissue-Powered Swimming Robot
Bio-actuators that use insect muscular tissue have attracted attention from researchers worldwide because of their small size, self-motive property, self-repairer ability, robustness, and the need for less environment management than mammalian cells. To demonstrate the potential of insect muscular tissue for use as bio-actuators, three types of these robots, a pillar actuator, a walker, and a twizzer, have been designed and fabricated. However, a model of an insect muscular tissue-powered swimming robot that is able to float and swim in a solution has not yet been reported. Therefore, in this paper, we present a prototype of an insect muscular tissue-powered autonomous micro swimming robot that operates at room temperature and requires no temperature and pH maintenance. To design a practical robot body that is capable of swimming by using the force of the insect dorsal vessel (DV), we first measured the contraction force of the DV. Then, the body of the swimming robot was designed, and the design was confirmed by a simulation that used the condition of measured contraction force. After that, we fabricated the robot body using polydimethylpolysiloxane (PDMS). The PDMS body was obtained from a mold that was fabricated by a stereo lithography method. Finally, we carefully attached the DV to the PDMS body to complete the assembly of the swimming robot. As a result, we confirmed the micro swimming robot swam autonomously at an average velocity of 11.7 μm/s using spontaneous contractions of the complete insect DV tissue. These results demonstrated that the insect DV has potential for use as a bio-actuator for floating and swimming in solution
Deep Drilling at the Arc-arc Collision Zone in the Yamakita Area, Central Honshu, Japan
We carried out borehole drilling in the Yamakita area near an active fault of the arc-arc collision zone in the western part of Kanagawa Prefecture. Slime and core samples were obtained. The borehole geology was established by examined them using petrographic analyses and geophysical logging data. We found that the southwestern slope of Mt. Maruyama was down-faulted from the northern slope of the mountain by an unknown fault. After drilling was completed, the borehole was established as a Hi-net seismic observation station. Data are collected by the Hi-net observation system and made available through the INTERNET