Abstract

Flapping-Wing Micro-Air-Vehicles (FWMAVs) are bio-inspired air vehicles that mimic insect and bird flight. The dynamic behavior of these systems is typically described by a multi-body, multi-time-scale, nonlinear, time-varying dynamical system. Interestingly, this rich dynamics lead to unconventional stabilization mechanisms whose study essentially necessitates a mathematically rigorous analysis. In this paper, we use higherorder averaging, which is based on chronological calculus, to show that insects and their man-made counterparts (FWMAVs) exploit vibrational control to stabilize their body pitching angle. Such an unconventional stabilization cannot be captured by direct averaging. We also experimentally demonstrate such a phenomenon by constructing an experimental setup that allows for two degrees of freedom for the body; forward motion and pitching motion. We measure the response of the body pitching angle using a digital camera and an image processing algorithm at different flapping frequencies. It is found that there is a flapping frequency threshold beyond which the body pitching response is naturally (without feedback) stabilized, which conforms with the vibrational control concept. Moreover, we also construct a replica of the experimental setup with the FWMAV being replaced by a propeller revolving at constant speed, which results in a constant aerodynamic force, leaving no room for vibrational control. The response of the propeller-setup is unstable at all frequencies, which also corroborates the fact that the observed stabilization of the FWMAV-setup at high frequencies is a vibrational stabilization phenomenon.

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