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All Thayer Events
Dartmouth Autonomy Seminar Series
May
21
Thursday, May 21, 2026
1:15pm–2:15pm ET
Spanos Auditorium/ Online
"AthenaZero: a low-inertia, bimanual robot for dynamic manipulation"
AthenaZero is a bimanual manipulator designed to maximize control authority while minimizing inertia. By utilizing quasi-direct drive actuation and transmission remotization techniques, the system achieves an effective endpoint mass comparable to that of a human. Trading off trajectory tracking stiffness as compared to conventional high-impedance manipulators, this architecture reduces reflected inertia by an order of magnitude. This characteristic, coupled with high control authority due to our actuator design, makes AthenaZero exceptionally well-suited for dynamic manipulation, particularly in its ability to accelerate over a wide range of joint velocities. We describe the methodology that led to this design and demonstrate its capabilities on three baseball-inspired tasks: throwing, catching, and batting, which showcase complex interactions on human-comparable timescales where milliseconds matter. Our robot was capable of throwing at speeds in excess of 30 m/s, while catching and batting at speeds in excess of 14 m/s over a short 7.3 m distance.
Light refreshments will be served.
Sponsored by Thayer School of Engineering and the Neukom Institute.
The Dartmouth Autonomy Seminar Series explores how common principles of autonomy link fields such as robotics, economics, and cognition, and brings together academia and industry to discuss autonomous systems.
About the Speaker(s)
Andrew (Andy) Morgan
Research Scientist, The Robotics & AI Institute

Andrew "Andy" Morgan is a research scientist at The Robotics & AI Institute in Cambridge, MA. He obtained his PhD from Yale University's GRAB Lab under the supervision of Professor Aaron Dollar in March of 2023. In this adventure, he was the recipient of the NSF GRFP and the RSS: Pioneers awards. His research mainly focuses on planning, control, and design for robot hands, typically for the use-case of robot in-hand manipulation. During his PhD, he also spent time at Amazon Robotics AI and TU Darmstadt working with Prof. Jan Peters. At RAI, he focuses on the design and control of low-impedance, high-torque manipulators for pushing towards dynamic contact interactions with robots.
Contact
For more information, contact Ada Yildirim at ada.yildirim.th@dartmouth.edu .
