ANN ARBOR, Mich., Feb. 5 (UPI) --
U.S. scientists are studying birds, bats and insects and their aerobatic efficiencies as a step toward designing flapping-wing airplanes.
University of Michigan engineers said such planes of the future might have wingspans smaller than a deck of playing cards and the aerodynamics of flying animals that can outperform current man-made aircraft.
For example, the engineers note the roll rate of the aerobatic A-4 Skyhawk plane is about 720 degrees per second. The roll rate of a barn swallow exceeds 5,000 degrees per second.
"Natural flyers obviously have some highly varied mechanical properties that we really have not incorporated in engineering," said Wei Shyy, chairman of the university's Aerospace Engineering department. "They're not only lighter but also have much more adaptive structures as well as capabilities of integrating aerodynamics with wing and body shapes, which change all the time."
Shyy and colleagues have grants from the U.S. Air Force totaling more than $1 million a year to research small flapping wing aircraft. Shyy's current focus is on the aerodynamics of flexible wings related to micro air vehicles with wingspans of 1-3 inches.
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