Synergetic agents : from multi-robot systems to molecular robotics
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Synergetic agents : from multi-robot systems to molecular robotics
Wiley-VCH, c2012
Available at 2 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book addresses both multi robot systems and miniaturization to the nanoscale from a unifying point of view, but without leaving aside typical particularities of either. The unifying aspect is based on the concept of information minimization whose precise formulation is the Haken-Levi-principle. The authors introduce basic concepts of multi-component self-organizing systems such as order parameters (well known from equilibrium and non-equilibrium phase transitions) and the slaving principle (which establishes a link to dynamical systems). Among explicit examples is the docking manoeuvre of two robots in two and three dimensions. The second part of the book deals with the rather recently arising field of molecular robotics. It is particularly here where nature has become a highly influential teacher for the construction of robots. In living biological cells astounding phenomena occur: there are molecules (proteins) that literally walk on polymer strands and transport loads that are heavier than their carriers, or molecules that, by joint action, contract muscles.
The book provides the reader with an insight into these phenomena, especially by a detailed theoretical treatment of the molecular mechanism of muscle contraction. At the molecular level, for an appropriate approach the use of quantum theory is indispensable. The authors introduce and use it in a form that avoids all the clumsy calculations of wave-functions. They present a model which is based on an elementary version of quantum field theory and allows taking into account the impact of the surrounding on the quantum mechanical activity of a single molecule. By presenting explicit and pedagogical examples, the reader gets acquainted with the appropriate modelling of the walking behaviour of single molecular robots and their collective behaviour. The further development of multi-robot systems and particularly of molecular robots will require the cooperation of a variety of disciplines. Therefore the book appeals to a wide audience including researchers, instructors, and advanced graduate students.
Table of Contents
Introduction Part I: Classical synergetic agents 1. In search for general principles 2. Multi-robot action I 3. Multi-robot action II: Extended configurations Part II: Quantum synergetic agents 4. Molecular robotics and quantum field theory 5. Quantum theory of robotic motion and chemical interactions 6. Applications to molecular processes 7. Molecular transport along one-dimensional periodic structures 8. A topic in quantum biology 9. Quantum information 10. Molecular robots Appendix: The meaning of expectation values and correlation functions of Bose and Fermi operators References
by "Nielsen BookData"