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Forces That Enable Flight

Forces That Enable Flight. Lift (upward force) Thrust (forward force). LIFT. Sources of Lift. Dynamic pressure above airfoil higher than below, thus static pressure below greater, pushes airfoil up

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Forces That Enable Flight

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  1. Forces That Enable Flight • Lift (upward force) • Thrust (forward force)

  2. LIFT

  3. Sources of Lift • Dynamic pressure above airfoil higher than below, thus static pressure below greater, pushes airfoil up • Some air deflected downward from lower surface, opposite (upward) reaction force is another source of lift

  4. Airfoils • Wing • Bone at leading edge with feathers trailing creates convex shape • Forearm with secondaries attached is the main source of lift • Primary feathers • Asymmetric shape with stiff rachis leading and long barbs trailing creates convex shape

  5. Thrust • Produced like propeller • Leading edge of wing cuts vertically, force produced is forward thrust • Large birds twist primary feathers as wing beats to produce thrust, forearm stays horizontal and continues to produce (increased) lift • Small birds create thrust with entire wing, plus additional thrust from primary feathers • Passive recovery upstroke

  6. Flight Adaptations • Rigid wing and feather structure • Required to create air flow patterns that result in lift • Because wing form maintained, forces created result in lift rather than bending of body • Light weight • Weight counters lift

  7. Application of Thrust • Momentum (mass x velocity) perpetuates thrust • Drag counters thrust • Profile drag (friction with air, the reason for streamlining) • Induced drag (turbulence)

  8. Sources of Drag • Air flow over wing (induced) • Wing tips (induced) • Projections from body (profile) • Adaptations in forelimb eliminate sources of profile drag • Alula is the exception

  9. Features used to maintain lift • Problem when wing is held at steep angle • Alula deflects air down over wing to maintain flow, prevent induced drag • Slots in wings perform same function, front primary directs air over primary behind • Air forced through slots expands on upper surface (reduced static pressure) to create more lift

  10. Static Soaring • Use thermals, obstruction currents to attain altitude • Use gravity to generate speed, lift • Low wing loading (large wings relative to weight) promotes use of lift • Must be able to maneuver at slow speeds • Use alula, have slots in wings • Broad, rounded wings produce drag to reduce momentum

  11. Soaring by Small Birds • Only possible at high speeds, because speed is the only source of momentum • Generate speed with thrust, use speed to generate lift • Low wing loading to promote use of lift • Long, narrow, pointed wings to reduce drag, maintain momentum

  12. Dynamic Soaring • Use gradient in wind speed at surface ocean • Use wind, gravity to increase speed, gain momentum as glide downwind • Use momentum, wind to generate lift, gain height when turn into wind • Gain velocity as rise due to wind speed gradient, start cycle over again

  13. Form for Dynamic Soaring • Dynamic soaring is based on perpetuating momentum • High wing loading increases momentum • Long, narrow, pointed wings to reduce drag, maintain momentum

  14. Wing Form • Longer hand portion in species that rely more on thrust compared to soaring birds • High speed fliers have long, narrow, pointed wings (falcons) • Many birds have shorter, more rounded wings for maneuverability through cover

  15. Wing Loading • Low in soaring birds (except dynamic soarers), high in diving birds • Higher in larger birds due to volume (weight) – area (wing size) relationship • Wing shape does not change with size • Migration selects for longer, narrower, more pointed wings

  16. Tails • Used as brake and rudder • Longer tails generate more drag • Long, forked tail best for high-speed maneuvering, short tail best for high speed • Also maneuver by folding wings • Tails sometimes are display features

  17. Landing • Slow down by braking with tail, feet (webbed especially) • Increase angle of wings, twist wings to reduce forward component of thrust • Turn into the wind, come in below perch • Some large birds have difficulty landing (too much momentum)

  18. Take-off • Use gravity to generate speed for lift by jumping from perch or cliff • Use wind and speed to generate lift by running into wind • Dynamic soarers have biggest problem • Use thrust by rotating wings vertically • Short, broad wing = power take-off wing (with white muscle)

  19. Hummingbirds: Avian Helicopters • Fly totally by thrust • Wing is mostly hand, little forearm • Rotate wing 180 degrees to produce force on both downstroke and upstroke • Figure 8 pattern of motion creates thrust perpendicular to plane of wingbeat • Can move in any direction • Can hover by producing upward thrust = weight

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