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University of Stuttgart

University of Stuttgart

The University of Stuttgart (German Universität Stuttgart) is a university located in Stuttgart, Germany.

Could sustainable development speed up with the help of robotics and autonomous systems?

Water on the sunlit surface of the Moon

New possibilities for ultrasound therapy and more with an ultrasonic projector for medicine

Personalized microrobots can swim through the body and deliver drugs to tumors or carry other cargo

Artificial intelligence tracks your eye movements to discern your personality

It’s often been said that the eyes are the window to the soul, revealing what we think and how we feel. Now, new research reveals that your eyes may also be an indicator of your personality type, simply by the way they move. Developed by the University of South Australia in partnership with the University of Stuttgart, Flinders University

Artificial intelligence tracks your eye movements to discern your personality

New organic solar cells are a flexible, lightweight, environmentally-friendly and 3 times as efficient

Research from the University of Surrey reveals scientists are able to improve the efficiency of solar cells more than threefold ·The solar cells are a flexible, lightweight and environmentally-friendly and have the capacity to be printed in different colours and shapes ·The solar cells are a contrast to their inorganic competitors as they also convert

New organic solar cells are a flexible, lightweight, environmentally-friendly and 3 times as efficient

Micro multi-lens camera can be injected with a syringe

German engineers have created a camera no bigger than a grain of salt that could change the future of health imaging—and clandestine surveillance. Using 3-D printing, researchers from the University of Stuttgart built a three-lens camera, and fit it onto the end of an optical fibre the width of two hairs. Such technology could be used

Micro multi-lens camera can be injected with a syringe

New biometric identifier: User identification through the skull

People use laptops and smartphones to save and organize their entire life – protected only by a password or a PIN. However, these are often not secure, because users do not choose or store them well. With so-called biometric identifiers such as fingerprints, voice or iris scans, users can be identified more easily and securely.

New biometric identifier: User identification through the skull

Microrobots learn from ciliates – could become micro-submarines to help detect and cure disease?

Ciliates can do amazing things: Being so tiny, the water in which they live is like thick honey to these microorganisms. In spite of this, however, they are able to self-propel through water by the synchronized movement of thousands of extremely thin filaments on their outer skin, called cilia. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute

Microrobots learn from ciliates – could become micro-submarines to help detect and cure disease?

Warning system for all crisis situations

The Alert4All solution is a new public warning system Since 2011, eleven research teams from six European countries have been looking into the fastest and most effective ways of warning the public in the event of a crisis situation. The Alert4All solution is a new public warning system emerging from an EU project of the

Warning system for all crisis situations

Research Project: Robotic Fabrication in Timber Construction

Their goal is to develop innovative, performative and sustainable construction systems made from wood Researchers at the University of Stuttgart develop a lightweight timber construction system combining robotic prefabrication with computational design and simulation processes, as well as three-dimensional surveying technologies used in engineering geodesy. In collaboration with Kuka, a manufacturer of industrial robot arms,

Research Project: Robotic Fabrication in Timber Construction

New World Record in Wireless Data Transmission

Capacity of Fiber Optics Reached – Radio Links May Close Gaps in Future Broad-band Internet Supply Researchers of the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid State Physics and the Karlsruhe Institute for Technology have achieved the wireless transmission of 40 Gbit/s at 240 GHz over a distance of one kilometer. Their most recent demonstration sets a

New World Record in Wireless Data Transmission

How utopian is the future?

The ‘Mobile Revolution’ is therefore leading to a system of different mobility devices that combine efficiency with an individualized urban lifestyle. StuUnder the slogan “Future needs Utopia” experts from Daimler discuss at the Future Talk in Berlin visionary ideas with external specialists from different fields. Among them are Philipp Hübl, Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at

How utopian is the future?

Robot Builds Pavilion from Carbon and Glass Fiber

The interdisciplinary project investigated biomimetic design strategies and robotic production. Students and researchers from the Institute for Computational Design (ICD) and the Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design (ITKE) at the University of Stuttgart completed a research pavilion that is entirely robotically fabricated from carbon and glass fiber composites. The interdisciplinary project investigated biomimetic design strategies

Robot Builds Pavilion from Carbon and Glass Fiber

Ultra Lightweight Construction Is Based On Hydraulics

Ultra lightweight structures Maximum load capacity with minimal consumption of materials ­- this is how supporting structures in construction should be today. Researchers from the University of Stuttgart together with Bosch Rexroth have now come a great deal closer to achieving this goal. They have constructed a wooden shell which is much thinner than anything

Ultra Lightweight Construction Is Based On Hydraulics

e-Genius flies into the record books, averages 100 mph over 211 miles

Just a couple of weeks after its maiden flight at the end of May, the e-Genius electric aircraft has now winged its way into the record books – managing to stay aloft for over two hours and maintain an average speed of 100 mph (160 kph). Its University of Stuttgart development team are now looking

e-Genius flies into the record books, averages 100 mph over 211 miles

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