Sign In:


  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    Researchers Randall Briggs, left, and Will Bosworth monitor a robotic cheetah during a test run on an athletic field at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., in October.

    Show
  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    Professor Sangbae Kim controls a robotic cheetah on a treadmill at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., in September.

    Show
  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    Researcher Hae Won Park works on the software for a robotic cheetah with a game controller at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass.

    Show
  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    Researchers prepare to test a robotic cheetah on an athletic field at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass.

    Show
  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    MIT researchers adjust the head of a robotic cheetah.

    Show
  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    Researcher Hae Won Park plugs the batteries into a robotic cheetah at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., in October.

    Show
  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    A robotic cheetah runs on an athletic field.

    Show
  • Hide
    Building a cheetah robot at MIT - The Associated Press | of | Share this photo

    A robotic cheetah sits at the feet of researcher Randall Briggs on an athletic field at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., in October. MIT scientists said the robot, modeled after the fastest land animal, may have real-world applications, including for prosthetic legs.

    Show