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Artificial powered exoskeleton

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Conceptual drawing of an exoskeleton produced by the U.S Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
Conceptual drawing of an exoskeleton produced by the U.S Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

An artificial powered exoskeleton is a self-powered exoskeleton typically intended for use by humans in battle, construction and survival in dangerous environments.

The United States Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and other organizations have researched exoskeletons for combat for decades, but progress has been limited and the actual utility of such systems in combat is still debated.

In the early 2000s a number of companies and research centres developed the first practical models of human exoskeletons. One of the main uses is enabling a soldier to carry heavy weights (50–100 kg) while running or climbing stairs. Most models use a hydraulic system controlled by an on-board computer. They can be powered by an internal combustion engine, batteries or, potentially, fuel cells. Another area of application is medical care, nursing in particular. Faced with the impending shortage of medical professionals and the increasing number of people in elderly care, several teams of Japanese engineers have developed exoskeletons designed to help nurses lift and carry patients.

Exoskeletons can also be applied in the area of rehabilitation of stroke or SCI patients. An exo-skeleton could reduce the number of therapists needed by allowing even the most impaired patient to be trained by one therapist, whereas now several are needed. Also training is more uniform, easier to analyse retrospectively and can be specifically customized for each patient. At this time there are several projects designing training aids for rehabilitations centres (LOPES exoskeleton, LOKOMAT and the gait trainer).

Human exoskeleton by Sarcos
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Human exoskeleton by Sarcos

Future speculation

Many expect exoskeletons to become widely used in the future by the military and police, and later by civilians as the technology becomes cheaper. However exoskeletons may have to compete for adoption with cybernetics - enhancing the human body itself with implants and prosthetics. But advances in this field may also help exoskeletal research, in that direct links to the nervous system may be possible, meaning the mechanical parts may be considered part of the body, creating more fluent movement. They may also benefit people who have been disabled by crippling diseases like ALS and multiple sclerosis.

Powered armor and other combat applications in fiction

In most portrayals of powered armor, the suit is usually not much larger than a human. In fact, it is more accurately described as a battlesuit with mechanical and electronic mechanisms designed to augment the wearer's abilities. In addition to the benefits provided by the exoskeleton, other popular features include internal life support for hostile environments, protection from environmental hazards such as radiation and vacuum, weapons targeting systems, firearms affixed directly to the suit itself, and transportation mechanisms that allow the wearer to fly, make giant leaps, or speed by on ground.

All of these systems are usually powered by some on-board, self-sufficient power source. Masamune Shirow's Landmates in Appleseed used simple internal combustion engines installed into the thigh assembly of the armor. Still, more fantastic power sources have been introduced, for example, in Halo and Halo 2, the Master Chief's MJOLNIR armor is powered by miniaturized fusion power reactors. In Privateer Press' Iron Kingdoms setting, a steam boiler powers an arcane conversion engine, which ultimately powers the suit. Similarly, in , the suits are powered by single-celled organisms cultured in Ovo Packs.

Not all sci-fi exoskeletons are mechanical, as modification of biological systems can produce similar strength, such as the Skin exoskeleton in Peter F. Hamilton's novel Fallen Dragon, Jim Shooter's X-O Manowar comic book, and the Guyver Japanese animation series.

The first citable examples of powered suits were the Fat Man underwater suits (with mechanical pantograph arms and a propulsion system), which debuted in Tom Swift and His Jetmarine (1954). The powered suit of Robert A. Heinlein's 1959 novel Starship Troopers can be seen as spawning the entire sub-genre concept of military "powered armor". A Japanese animated version of Starship Troopers was produced by Sunrise with mechanical designs by Studio Nue, which presented a reasonable visual portrayal of how the suit operated (although the OAV story differed greatly from the Heinlein novel).

Science fiction authors utilize the idea of personal self-powered exoskeletons, usually referred to as powered armor or more commonly power armor. They are often robotic in nature. Examples include:

In literature

In comics and manga

Iron Man, the most famous power armored superhero.
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Iron Man, the most famous power armored superhero.

In television and film

In animation

In Mecha

Mecha from Starship Troopers (1988).
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Mecha from Starship Troopers (1988).

Japanese animation (anime) and comics (manga) often feature powered armor in the mecha subgenre; both the subgenre and the suits are called "mecha". Most mecha are not human-enhancing exoskeletons so much as human-operated robots. The distinction between smaller mecha and their smaller cousins (and likely progenitors), the powered armor suits, is blurred; according to one definition, a mecha is piloted while a powered armor is worn. Anything large enough to have a cockpit where the pilot is seated is generally considered a mecha. Both Masamune Shirow's "Landmates" featured prominently in Appleseed and the form-fitting "Hardsuits" of Bubblegum Crisis are examples of powered armor that is worn. Conversely, the "Armored Trooper" of Armored Trooper VOTOMS are an example of piloted powered armor-sized mecha.

In Video Games

In other media

A SAMAS from Rifts
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A SAMAS from Rifts

Other alternatives

An alternative sci-fi concept to the powered armor would be the skinsuit, a very thin (hence the name) and flexible powered armor variant. The skinsuit can be used as an environmental-protection suit, similar to spacesuit (for example, in the Honorverse universe), or may have some artificial muscle that increases strength, resistance and endurance, but in that case sacrifices environmental protection, sensory equipment, and built-in weaponry. The suits seen in the anime and manga versions of Spriggan and Gantz or skull suit from would be prime example of this form of armor. The military uniforms in the webcomic Schlock Mercenary are almost universally skinsuits, utilizing buckminsterfullerene tubule-weave cloth and incorporating antigrav systems to allow a soldier flight capabilities.

As with powered exoskeletal armor, it is become apparent that even the skinsuit will become a possibility in the near future: The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has reopened research into the space activity suit, a type of spacesuit that equalizes pressure through mechanical pressure as the suit with the breathing gas and DARPA is researching using carbon nanofiber tubes as artificial muscles for powered uniforms as opposed to an exoskeleton rig.

In Dan Simmons' Hyperion books, one of the protagonists is aided by a woman from the very distant future; she uses advanced technology to sheathe the character in an energy 'skinsuit' that not only acts as a powered body armor, but tends to injuries, allows the wearer to focus on objects with perfect clarity from many kilometers away, and allows the wearer to phase-shift into near-light speed in order to do combat. A person 'skinsuited' thus would appear to the viewer to be covered in a micrometres-thin layer of mercury.

External links

 


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