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Surfing Birds: Bird flight and engineered wing responses to an unsteady vortex wake

ORAL

Abstract

Birds must accommodate unsteady flow structures encountered during flight, yet the coupling mechanism between flapping flight and flow patterns are not well studied. We report on a series of wind tunnel flight experiments in which European Starlings carrying accelerometer backpacks are exposed to an unsteady vortex wake generated by an upstream mounted airfoil, pitching close to the birds' flapping frequency. PIV measurements show that the wake can be generated dominated by positive vortices (upwash), negative vortices (downwash) or one with alternating signs of vorticity (von Karman street). When the birds fly in the unsteady wake, power spectra of the birds' vertical accelerations suggest that the wing flapping motion interacts with the dominant frequency of the pitching wing. We complement the live animal experiments with those using a model system comprised of a stationary NACA 0012 wing "surfing" in the wake of the upstream flapping foil. The wing is mounted on a force/torque transducer to capture the transient aerodynamic forces. Comparisons between the spectra measured in the model system and the accelerations experienced by the bird flights will be discussed.

Presenters

  • Siyang Hao

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University, Brown University

Authors

  • Siyang Hao

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University, Brown University

  • Sonja I Friman

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Cory Elowe

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Laura X Mendez

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Jared Ramirez

    University of Southern California

  • Raul Ayala

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University

  • Evrim Ozcan

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University

  • Caylan N Hagood

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Dayna Jackson

    Howard Univsersity, Howard University

  • Gabriella Orfanides

    Rochester Institute of Technology

  • Ian Brown

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University

  • Alexander Gerson

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Tyson L Hedrick

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Kenneth Breuer

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University, Brown University