The phrase E pluribus unum —“out of many, one”—is famously inscribed on the United States’ Great Seal, symbolizing unity from diversity. Surprisingly, this idea also captures the essence of cutting-edge microrobotics research. A team of scientists from Cornell University and the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems has demonstrated how a swarm of tiny microrobots can work together to manipulate objects on a water surface without ever touching them. Their work, recently published in Science Advances , could pave the way for performing microscale tasks and delicate biomedical procedures that traditional robots cannot achieve. The Challenge of Micromanipulation Microrobots operate on scales too small for conventional mechanical designs or onboard computers. When dealing with delicate tasks at the microscale, direct physical contact can be limiting or even destructive. This makes alternative methods of manipulation crucial. As Kirstin Petersen , associate professor at Cornell and...