It has been known for a century that quasisteady attached flows are insufficient to explain aerodynamic force production in bumblebees and many other insects. Most recent studies of the unsteady, separated-flow aerodynamics of insect flight have used physical, analytical or numerical modeling based upon simplified kinematic data treating the wing as a flat plate. However, despite the importance of validating such models against living subjects, few good data are available on what real insects actually do aerodynamically in free flight. Here we apply classical smoke line visualization techniques to analyze the aerodynamic mechanisms of free-flying bumblebees hovering, maneuvering and flying slowly along a windtunnel (advance ratio: -0.2 to 0...
Flight is a complicated task at the centimetre scale particularly due to unsteady air fluctuations w...
Here we show, by qualitative free- and tethered-flight flow visualization, that dragonflies fly by u...
International audienceHigh resolution direct numerical simulations of rotating and flapping bumblebe...
It has been known for a century that quasi-steady attached flows are insufficient to explain aerodyn...
Bumblebees cannot fly! That conclusion is likely to be drawn by scientists who analysed the insect u...
Our understanding of how variable wind in natural environments affects flying insects is limited bec...
The natural wind environment that volant insects encounter is unsteady and highly complex, posing si...
INSECTS cannot fly, according to the conventional laws of aerodynamics: during flapping flight, thei...
Hovering insects are divided into two categories: 'normal' hoverers that move the wing symmetrically...
Hovering insects are divided into two categories: ‘normal’ hoverers that move the wing symmetrically...
The flow structure that is largely responsible for the good performance of insect wings has recently...
Tethered flight of six insect species (two pentatomid bugs, a moth, a butterfly, a muscid fl y and a...
Two-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) is applied to better understand the effects of wi...
Flying insects generate forces that are too large to be accounted for by conventional steady-state a...
Flight is a complicated task at the centimetre scale particularly due to unsteady air fluctuations w...
Here we show, by qualitative free- and tethered-flight flow visualization, that dragonflies fly by u...
International audienceHigh resolution direct numerical simulations of rotating and flapping bumblebe...
It has been known for a century that quasi-steady attached flows are insufficient to explain aerodyn...
Bumblebees cannot fly! That conclusion is likely to be drawn by scientists who analysed the insect u...
Our understanding of how variable wind in natural environments affects flying insects is limited bec...
The natural wind environment that volant insects encounter is unsteady and highly complex, posing si...
INSECTS cannot fly, according to the conventional laws of aerodynamics: during flapping flight, thei...
Hovering insects are divided into two categories: 'normal' hoverers that move the wing symmetrically...
Hovering insects are divided into two categories: ‘normal’ hoverers that move the wing symmetrically...
The flow structure that is largely responsible for the good performance of insect wings has recently...
Tethered flight of six insect species (two pentatomid bugs, a moth, a butterfly, a muscid fl y and a...
Two-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) is applied to better understand the effects of wi...
Flying insects generate forces that are too large to be accounted for by conventional steady-state a...
Flight is a complicated task at the centimetre scale particularly due to unsteady air fluctuations w...
Here we show, by qualitative free- and tethered-flight flow visualization, that dragonflies fly by u...
International audienceHigh resolution direct numerical simulations of rotating and flapping bumblebe...