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Developing Robotic Birds Abridged Story From a news story by September 8, 1999
After nearly a hundred years of powered flight, scientists are still trying to figure out how birds fly. Pigeons make a slapping noise when they suddenly take off. Researchers have learned that this noise is the sound of super charged lift. They call it the "clap fling" effect. Here at S.R.I. International scientists try to duplicate the pigeons' thrust. A flashing strobe reveals the secret. Scott Stanford, a scientist at SRI, says, "You're looking at the clap fling effect, where the two wings will come together and peel apart from each other, thus augmenting lift by drawing air from the top to the bottom." Professor Max Platzer of the Naval Postgraduate School, says, "The flapping wing is generating a thrust, this way, this is the basic physics of the phenomenon." It's pelicans - not pigeons - the Navy is looking at. The Navy is looking at the smooth easy flight of pelicans low over water. This is called "ground effect." Researchers at the Naval Postgraduate School are trying to imitate the pelican. Assistant Professor Kevin Jones of the Naval Postgraduate School says, "By flapping the wings, symmetrically, we're in effect imitating ground effect. We now have the same feature a bird sees when it's flying over a ground plane." An electric motor drives the flapping wings. Researchers here are working on ways to beam power to the tiny bird. Scientists are learning it's one thing to build an airplane, but quite another to build a bird.
Additional notes: The Notes: To really understand the project described in this article, it is important to know something about how things fly. Here are a few websites that will explain this to you. Also, there is a lot of information about birds on the Internet. Here are some selected sites with links to many other websites.
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