Dictionary
exoskeleton
noun
A hard outer structure that provides both structure and protection to creatures such as insects and Crustacea.
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The word 'exoskeleton' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use 'exoskeleton' to refer to a type of supportive external framework, usually for an animal or machine. For example: "The insect has an exoskeleton that protects it from harm."
Exact(57)
If an assistive exoskeleton is implicated in a death, who is at fault?
That Cyberdyne can sell its battery-powered exoskeleton for the price it does even though it is manufactured on a limited scale suggests Japan's well-established mechatronics industry should have little difficulty mass producing assistive robots for the price the government has set.
The battery-powered suit functions as an exoskeleton, sensing and amplifying the wearer's muscle action when he attempts to lift or carry heavy objects.
Apart from a motorised exoskeleton like the Cyberdyne device, the plan envisages three other assistive devices, each costing less than ¥100,000.
Instead, the floors are held up by an innovative steel exoskeleton.
He plans to add regenerative capabilities to the exoskeleton, so that it will require little or no power when moving on level ground.This sort of device is primarily aimed at improving distance rather than speed, says Dr Herr.
And it does not require much energy to work: in its current form the exoskeleton has just two small clutches which only draw a quarter of a watt of power each.
And that lets it modulate a current, and thus a signal.To test this idea, the researchers printed a plastic "exoskeleton", containing strips of carbomorph, that can be attached to a glove.
Similar(3)
The superstructure is an "endoskeleton" built around a central spine, rather than a traditional "exoskeleton -like framexoskeleton -like
Not so for news from Daewoo's shipbuilding factory in South Korea, which has announced that it plans to equip its workers with full-body robotic exoskeletons to aid with heavy lifting.
This made the animals' exoskeletons, which are composed of a sugar-based polymer called chitin, fluoresce thus revealing details of their surface features.
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