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Footprints of a flapping wing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2017

Abstract

Birds have to flap their wings to generate the needed thrust force, which powers them through the air. But how exactly do flapping wings create such force, and at what amplitude and frequency should they operate? These questions have been asked by many researchers. It turns out that much of the secret is hidden in the wake left behind the flapping wing. Exemplified by the study of Andersen et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 812, 2017, R4), close examination of the flow pattern behind a flapping wing will inform us whether the wing is towed by an external force or able to generate a net thrust force by itself. Such studies are much like looking at the footprints of terrestrial animals as we infer their size and weight, figuring out their walking and running gaits. A map that displays the collection of flow patterns after a flapping wing, using flapping frequency and amplitude as the coordinates, offers a full picture of its flying ‘gaits’.

Information

Type
Focus on Fluids
Copyright
© 2017 Cambridge University Press 
Figure 0

Figure 1. (a) A von Kármán vortex street produced from a pitching wing in a flowing soap film. When the wing is flapped slowly, it experiences a net drag force. (b) An inverted von Kármán vortex street, obtained by the particle vortex method, emerging as the wing flaps faster at the drag–thrust boundary. The red (blue) particles indicate counter-clockwise (clockwise) local fluid rotation and the magenta curve shows that a backward jet is being generated when compared against the black line that shows the unperturbed uniform flow profile. (Image courtesy of Andersen et al. (2017).)