Mini choppers inspired by spinning seeds could soon be a reality
January 29th, 2011 - 1:01 pm ICT by ANILondon, Jan 29 (ANI): Technology gets inspiration from nature very often - and a new study is just another example of that - a mini helicopter that mimics flying tree seeds.
Standard mini helicopters expend most of their power simply fighting to stay stable in the air, leading researchers at the University of Maryland in College Park to hypothesize that a simpler aircraft designed to stay stable passively would use much less power and cut manufacturing costs.
However, this concept is already implemented in nature - samara seeds of trees such as the maple have a single-blade structure that allows them to fly far away and drift safely to the ground.
And they simply use a process called autorotation to spin through the air.
The idea that Evan Ulrich applied was that both natural and robotic samaras travel in a fixed circle whose radius is determined by the pitch of the wing.
“We can change the size of the circle the vehicle is travelling in and pilot the aircraft to any desired destination,” New Scientist quoted him as saying.
“It can potentially compete with satellites,” he added.
“A larger robotic samara would be deployed into the jet stream and be able to use the fast-moving air to stay aloft,” Ulrich said.
“The samara concept is an interesting one, which has merit in terms of its size and mass,” said Stephen Prior, a researcher in autonomous robotic systems at Middlesex University in London.
“However, like most nano air vehicles it suffers from lack of endurance and the difficulty of getting a stable image off the platform, since it is continuously spinning.” (ANI)
- Maple tree seeds inspire devices that can hover and perform surveillance - Oct 21, 2009
- Next gen air vehicles - inspired by birds, snakes and insects! - Nov 24, 2010
- US Air Force launches second robotic space plane on mystery mission - Mar 06, 2011
- Soon, maple seeds inspired 'micro helicopters' to soar the skies - Jun 12, 2009
- Personal drones can snoop on you anywhere, anytime - Nov 07, 2010
- Indian deal hot topic at record breaking AeroIndia - Feb 11, 2011
- One killed in Russian chopper's hard landing - Dec 20, 2011
- Micro robo flies can save up to 50 percent energy if they fly like helicopters - Aug 08, 2009
- How birds avoid hitting trees - Jan 25, 2012
- US close to unveiling flying car as Iran reveals hybrid flying boat squadron - Oct 04, 2010
- Haitian government plane makes emergency landing in Cuba - Nov 16, 2011
- Pakistani woman fighter pilot hurt in crash (Lead) - Aug 16, 2011
- Tree species greatly at risk from climate change - Jan 25, 2011
- US training more drone operators than fighter, bomber pilots - Aug 24, 2009
- Volkswagen launches Touareg, Beetle variants - Jan 05, 2012
Tags: air vehicles, autonomous robotic systems, college park, endurance, helicopter, helicopters, jan 29, jet stream, london jan, middlesex university, mini choppers, nano, new scientist, researcher, satellites, stable image, tree seeds, ulrich, university in london, university of maryland