| Development of Biomorphic Flyers |
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| NASA 's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California | |
| Oct 31 2004 | |
Autonomous flight control and navigation in small size is offered for planetary and terrestrial exploration applications.
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Biomorphic flyers have recently been demonstrated that utilize the approach described earlier in "Bio-Inspired Engineering of Exploration Systems" (NPO-21142), NASA Tech Briefs ,Vol.27, No.5 (May 2003), page 54, to distill the principles found in successful, nature-tested mechanisms of flight control. Two types of flyers are being built, corresponding to the imaging and shepherding flyers for a biomorphic mission described earlier in "Cooperative Lander-Surface/Aerial Microflyer Missions for Mars Exploration" ( NPO-30286), NASA Tech Briefs, Vol.28, No.5 (May 2004), page 36. The common features of these two types of flyers are that both are delta-wing airplanes incorporating bio-inspired capabilities of control, navigation, and visual search for exploration. The delta-wing design is robust to ~40 G axial load and offers ease of stowing and packaging. A full inertial unit and significant processing would otherwise be required to achieve the same effect.As a prelude to full autonomy, substantial stability augmentation is provided to the pilot at very low cost in terms of space, power,and mass. The sensor is about 40 times lighter than a comparable inertial attitude reference system.Other significant features of the biomorphic flyer shown in the figure include its ability to fly at high angles of attack ~30° and a deep wing chord which allows scaling to small size and low Reynold 's number situations.Furthermore, the placement of the propulsion system near the center of gravity allows continued control authority at low speeds. These attributes make such biomorphic flyers uniquely suited to planetary and terrestrial exploration where small size and autonomous airborne operation are required. This work was done by Sarita Thakoor of Caltech for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and by Dean Soccol, G. Stange, Geno Ewyk, Matt Garratt, M. Srinivasan, and Javaan Chahl of Australian National University and Butler Hine and Steven Zornetzer of Ames Research Center for the NASA Intelligent Systems Program. For further information, access the Technical Support Package (TSP) free on-line at www.techbriefs.com/tsp under the Machinery/Automation category. NPO-30554 This Brief includes a Technical Support Package (TSP).Development of Biomorphic Flyers (reference NPO-30554) is currently available for download from the TSP library. Login first to download.
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