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The complex aerodynamic footprint of desert locusts revealed by large-volume tomographic particle image velocimetry
Authors:Per Henningsson  Dirk Michaelis  Toshiyuki Nakata  Daniel Schanz  Reinhard Geisler  Andreas Schr?der  Richard J Bomphrey
Affiliation:1Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden;2LaVision GmbH, Göttingen, Germany;3Structure and Motion Laboratory, Royal Veterinary College, University of London, London, UK;4German Aerospace Centre (DLR), Göttingen, Germany
Abstract:Particle image velocimetry has been the preferred experimental technique with which to study the aerodynamics of animal flight for over a decade. In that time, hardware has become more accessible and the software has progressed from the acquisition of planes through the flow field to the reconstruction of small volumetric measurements. Until now, it has not been possible to capture large volumes that incorporate the full wavelength of the aerodynamic track left behind during a complete wingbeat cycle. Here, we use a unique apparatus to acquire the first instantaneous wake volume of a flying animal''s entire wingbeat. We confirm the presence of wake deformation behind desert locusts and quantify the effect of that deformation on estimates of aerodynamic force and the efficiency of lift generation. We present previously undescribed vortex wake phenomena, including entrainment around the wing-tip vortices of a set of secondary vortices borne of Kelvin–Helmholtz instability in the shear layer behind the flapping wings.
Keywords:aerodynamics  tomographic particle image velocimetry  desert locust  animal flight  wake deformation  span efficiency
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