November
16, 2015
Compared
to birds and insects, bats have heavy wings for their body size. Those
comparatively cumbersome flappers might seem a detriment to maneuverability,
but new research shows that bats' extra wing mass makes possible a
quintessential bit of aerobatics: the ability to land upside down.
"Bats
land in a unique way," said Sharon Swartz, a biologist at Brown University
who was a senior author of the new research along with Kenny Breuer from
Brown's School of Engineering. "They have to go from flying with their
heads forward to executing an acrobatic maneuver that puts them head down and
feet up. No other flying animal lands the same way as bats do."
But
exactly how they are able to generate the forces necessary to perform those
maneuvers hadn't been clear.
"When
they come in to land they're not moving very fast, which makes it hard to
generate the aerodynamic forces needed to reorient themselves,"
Breuer said. "So the question is, how do bats get themselves in position
to land?"
Using
a special flight enclosure, high-speed
cameras and some
sophisticated computer modeling, the researchers showed that it has a lot to do
with wing mass and inertia.
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