A New Investigation of Natural Flight Characteristics and Theory

2004-01-3089

11/02/2004

Event
World Aviation Congress & Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
The typical aeronautical engineering approach to low Reynolds number flight studies has been to start with known high Reynolds number aerodynamic paradigms and attempt to match them by scaling to observations of birds and insects. On the other hand, the typical biological approach to natural flight aerodynamics has been to try to fit the observations of birds and insects into the typical known aerodynamic paradigms. Neither of these approaches has met with much success, and although we know more about the potential processes of natural flight, we have not been able to describe them using the framework of conventional aerodynamics. The investigation of low Reynolds number aerodynamic flows at the University of Dayton has led to a proposed new method of characterizing and describing the aerodynamics of natural flight. Lift in natural flight is theorized to be based in the spanwise flow along the curvature of a flapping wing.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-3089
Pages
10
Citation
Alford, L., and Altman, A., "A New Investigation of Natural Flight Characteristics and Theory," SAE Technical Paper 2004-01-3089, 2004, https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-3089.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Nov 2, 2004
Product Code
2004-01-3089
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English