the fork on the left
The sensors that an engineer puts on a robot are entirely dependent upon the functions that the engineer perceives that the the robot will be called upon to perform. Some, but not all, of the sensors may be: proximity sensors, pressure sensors, light sensors, magnetic sensors, a camera, temperature sensors, accelerometer, speed sensor... The question isn't, "what sensors does a robot have", but rather, "what sensors does the engineer think that the robot should have?"
The Polar robot has multiple sensors, including infrared sensors for detecting obstacles, line-following sensors for tracking lines on the ground, and touch sensors for interacting with the environment. These sensors help the robot navigate its surroundings and perform tasks autonomously.
Alot of them use a sonar-like sensors that emit soundwaves to help them "see".
not all do, but most do
ASIMO the robot is equipped with various sensors such as cameras, force sensors in its feet, gyro sensors for balance, touch sensors on its hands, and infrared sensors for detecting objects and obstacles. These sensors help ASIMO interact with its environment, navigate, and perform tasks safely and efficiently.
nope
Household products that use sensors include smart thermostats, motion-activated lights, smart refrigerators with temperature sensors, and automated vacuum cleaners equipped with obstacle-detection sensors. These sensors help improve energy efficiency, convenience, and safety in the household.
Yes, of course. Sensors are necessary to check own status and/or of any object (like human target). Without sensors any robot is not able to search, find, indentify or even to move in difficult area. Sensors are important to receive feedback for the human, who is steering a robot. If robot is at automatic drive (no human is steering - only on software running) sensors are also very important to the robot to get any information about the outside, the surrounding of it.
Household robots are typically taught to perform tasks through a combination of programming, machine learning, and sensor feedback. Developers create algorithms that define the robot's actions, while machine learning allows the robot to improve its performance by learning from experience and user interactions. Additionally, sensors help the robot perceive its environment, enabling it to adapt to changes and execute tasks more effectively. Some robots can also be trained via demonstration, where a user shows the robot how to perform a task, which the robot then mimics.
Robot sensors detect different things and send different amounts of electricity to the Robot's controller board to tell their findings. Then the controller board uses these different amounts of electricity to interact with its surroundings. Example: Lets say you have a robot that is made to follow light. Lets say your robot has 3 light sensors. One in the front of your robot one on the right and one on the left side. The sensors will detect how much light is on the front, right, and left sides and send this data to the controller board. Then the controller board uses this data to tell the robot with direction to go.
your computer