
Wandering Albatross (Diomedea exulans) in flight, East of the Tasman Peninsula, Tasmania, Australia
Albatrosses leverage the energy of the wind to fly with essentially no
mechanical cost to themselves, very rarely flapping their wings. New
work offers insight into how exactly they accomplish this feat.
The researchers, led by Gottfried Sachs of the Technische
Universitaet Muenchen and Francesco Bonadonna of the French National
Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), used advanced GPS tracking.
They determined that the energy gain during the albatross's "dynamic
soaring" comes from a repeated oscillation consisting of a combined
curve-altitude flight maneuver, with optimal adjustment for the wind.
The results may provide inspiration for robotic aircraft that utilize
the flight technique of albatrosses for engineless propulsion, the
authors write.
The research was published Sept. 5 in the open access journal PLoS ONE.
No comments:
Post a Comment