Low Dimensional Analysis of Wing Surface Morphology in Hummingbird Free Flight

ORAL

Abstract

Surface morphing in flapping wings is a hallmark of bird flight. In current work, the role of dynamic wing morphing of a free flying hummingbird is studied in detail. A 3D image-based surface reconstruction method is used to obtain the kinematics and deformation of hummingbird wings from high-quality high-speed videos. The observed wing surface morphing is highly complex and a number of modeling methods including singular value decomposition (SVD) are used to obtain the fundamental kinematical modes with distinct motion features. Their aerodynamic roles are investigated by conducting immersed-boundary-method based flow simulations. The results show that the chord-wise deformation modes play key roles in the attachment of leading-edge vortex, thus improve the performance of the flapping wings.

*This work is supported by NSF CBET-1313217 and AFOSR FA9550-12-1-0071

Authors

  • Gregory Shallcross

    • University of Virginia
  • Yan Ren

    • University of Virginia
  • Geng Liu

    • University of Virginia
  • Haibo Dong

    • University of Virginia
  • Bret Tobalske

    • University of Montana