释义 |
Definition of nanobot in English: nanobotnoun ˈnanəʊbɒtˈnænoʊˌbɑt A hypothetical very small (nanoscale) self-propelled machine, especially one that has some degree of autonomy and can reproduce. Example sentencesExamples - The skin was parted by the nanobots to reveal the GPS's screen beneath the surface.
- The blade itself is stored in the hilt and is made of a hive of specialist nanobots, tiny robots that link to form a one and a half to two metre blade.
- The fear that nanobots might turn the world into mush is known in the trade as the ‘gray goo problem,’ the apocalyptic scenario at the heart of Crichton's novel.
- Can't we just use nanobots to eat the cell's walls?
- Certainly some of the nanoparticle-based technologies are near term, but nanobots that whip through our blood stream, diagnosing and curing disease?
- Each one is like a little factory, see, and when it comes in contact with matter, it converts that matter into more nanobots - which convert more matter into more nanobots.
- Some feared nanomachines might convert every atom on the planet into more nanobots, leaving the entire world made of small machines.
- The day may come - soon - when the nanobots are making our Caesar salad from molecular scratch and robots are swaddling our infants.
- Organizations, including governments, extremist groups or even a clever individual, could put trillions of undetectable nanobots in the water or food supply of an entire population.
- The idea of Drexler's nanobots is indeed a cool one.
- But before nanobots become practical more conventional miniaturized robots will do a lot of repair work.
- There are nanobots inside the capsule; tiny microscopic machines that will repair your cybernetics.
- Jump ahead another two decades and we'll flood our brains with nanobots that will serve as even more sophisticated communicators and memory banks.
- ‘One response is not to want to be enhanced,’ he says, ‘not to have nanobots.’
- The guidelines forbid the creation of nanobots capable of ‘replication in a natural, uncontrolled environment,’ and provide several other principles for nanotechnologists.
- For instance, so-called nanobots could be programmed to attack and reconstruct the cells of cancer patients or perform surgeries a thousand times more precise than currently possible.
- He envisions a scary scenario straight out of H G Wells or Star Wars, in which trillions of self-reproducing nanobots would take on a life of their own and reduce our planet to a massive lump of ‘grey goo’.
- Specifically, robots, engineered organisms, and nanobots share a dangerous amplifying factor: they can self-replicate.
- The concern that has generated the most attention in the popular press has been gray goo - selfreplicating nanobots that could hypothetically get out of control.
- When asked about the ‘hype,’ this expert claims that all the hype is around nanobots - which no one is seriously working on.
Definition of nanobot in US English: nanobotnounˈnanōˌbätˈnænoʊˌbɑt A hypothetical, very small, self-propelled machine, especially one that has some degree of autonomy and can reproduce. Example sentencesExamples - But before nanobots become practical more conventional miniaturized robots will do a lot of repair work.
- The day may come - soon - when the nanobots are making our Caesar salad from molecular scratch and robots are swaddling our infants.
- Some feared nanomachines might convert every atom on the planet into more nanobots, leaving the entire world made of small machines.
- Certainly some of the nanoparticle-based technologies are near term, but nanobots that whip through our blood stream, diagnosing and curing disease?
- Specifically, robots, engineered organisms, and nanobots share a dangerous amplifying factor: they can self-replicate.
- ‘One response is not to want to be enhanced,’ he says, ‘not to have nanobots.’
- The fear that nanobots might turn the world into mush is known in the trade as the ‘gray goo problem,’ the apocalyptic scenario at the heart of Crichton's novel.
- When asked about the ‘hype,’ this expert claims that all the hype is around nanobots - which no one is seriously working on.
- The idea of Drexler's nanobots is indeed a cool one.
- For instance, so-called nanobots could be programmed to attack and reconstruct the cells of cancer patients or perform surgeries a thousand times more precise than currently possible.
- Can't we just use nanobots to eat the cell's walls?
- The blade itself is stored in the hilt and is made of a hive of specialist nanobots, tiny robots that link to form a one and a half to two metre blade.
- There are nanobots inside the capsule; tiny microscopic machines that will repair your cybernetics.
- Organizations, including governments, extremist groups or even a clever individual, could put trillions of undetectable nanobots in the water or food supply of an entire population.
- Jump ahead another two decades and we'll flood our brains with nanobots that will serve as even more sophisticated communicators and memory banks.
- The concern that has generated the most attention in the popular press has been gray goo - selfreplicating nanobots that could hypothetically get out of control.
- The guidelines forbid the creation of nanobots capable of ‘replication in a natural, uncontrolled environment,’ and provide several other principles for nanotechnologists.
- He envisions a scary scenario straight out of H G Wells or Star Wars, in which trillions of self-reproducing nanobots would take on a life of their own and reduce our planet to a massive lump of ‘grey goo’.
- The skin was parted by the nanobots to reveal the GPS's screen beneath the surface.
- Each one is like a little factory, see, and when it comes in contact with matter, it converts that matter into more nanobots - which convert more matter into more nanobots.
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