Actually, a robot arm with a unique magnet was controlling the jaws remotely.
“The vital components, the blood vessels, were visible,” states Dr. Matthew Kroh of the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. Before long, he and his robotic helper had successfully removed the bothersome gall bladder. This was one of perhaps twenty comparable surgeries that he and his colleagues had carried out with their advanced technology in the last few months.
He explains that its ability to perform a typical operation in a less invasive manner means that fewer incisions are needed for similar treatments. However, a plethora of additional novel uses also make use of precision-engineered magnets.
The type of permanent magnets that adhere colorful mementos to your refrigerator door may appear to be a very advanced and well-established technological advancement. After all, they have been in use for millennia. Still, companies and scientists are working extremely hard these days to make magnets that are stronger and more efficient than they were in the past.