Bumblebees minimize control challenges by combining active and passive modes in unsteady winds (1603.00221v2)
Abstract: The natural wind environment that volant insects encounter is unsteady and highly complex, posing significant flight control and stability challenges. Unsteady airflows can range from structured chains of discrete vortices shed in the wake of an object to fully developed chaotic turbulence. It is critical to understand the flight control strategies insects employ to safely navigate in natural environments. We combined experiments on free flying bumblebees with high fidelity numerical simulations and lower order modeling to identify the salient mechanics that mediate insect flight in unsteady winds. We trained bumblebees to fly upwind towards an artificial flower in a wind tunnel under steady wind and in a von Karman street (23Hz) formed in the wake of a cylinder. The bees displayed significantly higher movement in the unsteady vortex street compared to steady winds. Correlation analysis revealed that at lower frequencies, less than 10 Hz, in both steady and unsteady winds the bees mediated lateral movement with body roll, typical casting motion. At higher frequencies in unsteady winds there was a negative correlation between body roll and lateral accelerations. Numerical simulations of a bumblebee in similar conditions permitted the separation of the passive and active components of the flight trajectories. Comparison between the free-flying and numerical bees revealed a novel mechanism that enables bees to passively ride out high frequency perturbations while performing active maneuvers and corrections at lower frequencies. The capacity of maintaining stability by combining passive and active modes at different timescales provides a viable means for volant animals and machines to tackle the control challenges posed by complex airflows.
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