Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

This catapult crashes drones into raw pork to simulate what collisions do to the human body

Add as a preferred source on Google

There’s nothing funny about crashing a drone – unless the drone is intentionally smashed into an uncooked pork roast.

Related: See here the latest photography drones out on the market

Recommended Videos

Less concerned with humor than they are with safety, researchers at Aalborg University’s Drone Research Lab decided to test what happens when small hobby drones collide with animals, cars, glass, people, or other objects that may obstruct one’s flight path. To do so, the lab created a custom-built catapult to launch drones into foreign objects. Lighting and a high speed camera were setup for observations.

“The first attempts are interesting because they clearly show what could happened when a regular hobby drone hits a human being,” the Drone Research Lab’s director, Anders la Cour-Harbo, told Science Daily. “But it’s too early to conclude anything.”

According to researchers, the custom-built, aluminum catapult is nearly ten feet long and can accelerate a two pound drone (or an adorable toy airplane) up to almost 50 feet per second. The high speed camera is capable of capturing over 3,000 frames per second.

DroneImpact - T0004 - 3200 fps to 25 fps (500 g wood drone, 13 m/s)

The first videos released by the lab shows the impact of various objects in slow motion as the lab experiments with lighting and camera speeds. In place of an actual human subject sits an uncooked pork roast. Since pigs’ internal structure is similar to ours, swine are valuable (and cheap) test crash dummies.

As the carbon propeller impacts the pork it seems to fracture and pierce right into the flesh. Though this video was just a test shot, the results may make you duck and hide from any low flying objects.

In recent months we’ve seen drones crash into the Empire State Building and the crowd at a Muse concert. No injuries were reported in these cases, but plenty of other crashes have resulted in bodily harm, which have raised safety concerns as drones become more regular fixtures in the sky.

Dyllan Furness
Former Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
Everything is not okay with DuckDuckGo and its AI
A coordinated Reddit campaign appears to have tricked multiple AI search assistants into spreading false information.
The DuckDuckGo logo.

DuckDuckGo has built its reputation on privacy-first search, but this week, its AI assistant landed in hot water for an entirely different reason. Apparently, Duck.ai confidently claimed that U.S. President Donald Trump had died of rabies earlier this month, complete with fabricated details about Vice President JD Vance, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and fake supporting news reports. None of it was true.

A fake Reddit campaign managed to fool Duck's AI

Read more
Stanford scientists built an AI that can design healthier, greener burgers
The new system balances nutrition, taste, cost, and environmental impact to create better recipes.
Burger, Food, Food Presentation - Man picking a burger

Artificial intelligence has already helped write code, discover drugs, and generate videos. Now, it's trying to make a better burger. Researchers at Stanford University have unveiled BurgerAI, a new AI system that designs burger recipes by balancing taste, nutrition, sustainability, and cost. The surprising part? In blind taste tests, diners liked some of the AI-created burgers just as much as, and in some cases more than, a popular fast-food burger.

BurgerAI is designed to invent recipes, not copy them

Read more
OpenAI reveals its most advanced GPT-5.6 model, but you can’t access it yet
GPT-5.6 brings new reasoning, autonomy, and cybersecurity capabilities, but its rollout is currently limited to government-approved customers.
OpenAI ChatGPT 5.6 Sol Terra Luna Announced

OpenAI has officially taken the wraps off GPT-5.6, its most advanced family of AI models to date. There's just one catch: unless you're one of a handful of approved customers, you won't be able to try it anytime soon. Instead of a broad launch, the company is beginning with a tightly controlled preview while it works through a new U.S. government review process.

GPT-5.6 is here, but only a few people can use it

Read more