Taylor G K, Thomas A L R
Department of Zoology, Oxford University, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3PS, UK.
J Theor Biol. 2002 Feb 7;214(3):351-70. doi: 10.1006/jtbi.2001.2470.
Stability is essential to flying and is usually assumed to be especially problematic in flapping flight. If so, problems of stability may have presented a particular hurdle to the evolution of flapping flight. In spite of this, the stability of flapping flight has never been properly analysed. Here we use quasi-static and blade element approaches to analyse the stability provided by a flapping wing. By using reduced order approximations to the natural modes of motion, we show that wing beat frequencies are generally high enough compared to the natural frequencies of motion for a quasi-static approach to be valid as a first approximation. Contrary to expectations, we find that there is noting inherently destabilizing about flapping: beating the wings faster simply amplifies any existing stability or instability, and flapping can even enhance stability compared to gliding at the same air speed. This suggests that aerodynamic stability may not have been a particular hurdle in the evolution of flapping flight. Hovering animals, like hovering helicopters, are predicted to possess neutral static stability. Flapping animals, like fixed wing aircraft, are predicted to be stable in forward flight if the mean flight force acts above and/or behind the centre of gravity. In this case, the downstroke will always be stabilizing. The stabilizing contribution may be diminished by an active upstroke with a low advance ratio and more horizontal stroke plane; other forms of the upstroke may make a small positive contribution to stability. An active upstroke could, therefore, be used to lower stability and enhance manoeuvrability. Translatory mechanisms of unsteady lift production are predicted to amplify the stability predicted by a quasi-static analysis. Non-translatory mechanisms will make little or no contribution to stability. This may be one reason why flies, and other animals which rely upon non-translatory aerodynamic mechanisms, often appear inherently unstable.
稳定性对于飞行至关重要,通常认为在扑翼飞行中稳定性问题尤其突出。倘若如此,稳定性问题可能对扑翼飞行的进化构成了特殊障碍。尽管如此,扑翼飞行的稳定性从未得到过恰当分析。在此,我们运用准静态和叶素方法来分析扑翼所提供的稳定性。通过对自然运动模式采用降阶近似,我们表明,与运动的自然频率相比,翅膀拍打频率通常足够高,以至于准静态方法作为一阶近似是有效的。与预期相反,我们发现扑翼本身并没有内在的不稳定因素:翅膀拍打速度更快只会放大任何现有的稳定性或不稳定性,而且与以相同空速滑翔相比,扑翼甚至可以增强稳定性。这表明空气动力学稳定性可能并非扑翼飞行进化过程中的特殊障碍。预计悬停的动物,如悬停的直升机,具有中性静态稳定性。预计扑翼的动物,如固定翼飞机,如果平均飞行力作用于重心上方和/或后方,则在向前飞行时是稳定的。在这种情况下,下拍总是具有稳定作用。低前进比且 stroke 平面更水平的主动上拍可能会削弱这种稳定作用;上拍的其他形式可能对稳定性有小的正向贡献。因此,主动上拍可用于降低稳定性并增强机动性。预计非定常升力产生的平移机制会放大准静态分析所预测的稳定性。非平移机制对稳定性的贡献很小或没有贡献。这可能是苍蝇以及其他依赖非平移空气动力学机制的动物常常显得天生不稳定的原因之一。