The influence of sensory delay on the yaw dynamics of a flapping insect |
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Authors: | Michael J. Elzinga William B. Dickson Michael H. Dickinson |
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Affiliation: | 1.California Institute of Technology, Mail Code 138-78, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA;2.IO Rodeo Inc., 402B S Marengo Avenue, Pasadena, CA 91101, USA;3.University of Washington, Box 351800, 24 Kincaid Hall, Seattle, WA 98195, USA |
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Abstract: | In closed-loop systems, sensor feedback delays may have disastrous implications for performance and stability. Flies have evolved multiple specializations to reduce this latency, but the fastest feedback during flight involves a delay that is still significant on the timescale of body dynamics. We explored the effect of sensor delay on flight stability and performance for yaw turns using a dynamically scaled robotic model of the fruitfly, Drosophila. The robot was equipped with a real-time feedback system that performed active turns in response to measured torque about the functional yaw axis. We performed system response experiments for a proportional controller in yaw velocity for a range of feedback delays, similar in dimensionless timescale to those experienced by a fly. The results show a fundamental trade-off between sensor delay and permissible feedback gain, and suggest that fast mechanosensory feedback in flies, and most probably in other insects, provide a source of active damping which compliments that contributed by passive effects. Presented in the context of these findings, a control architecture whereby a haltere-mediated inner-loop proportional controller provides damping for slower visually mediated feedback is consistent with tethered-flight measurements, free-flight observations and engineering design principles. |
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Keywords: | Drosophila sensory delay flapping flight flight control insect flight insect aerodynamics |
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