generation of insect-size flying machines, Johns Hopkins  engineers have been aiming high-speed video cameras at some of the  prettiest bugs on the planet. By figuring out how butterflies flutter  among flowers with amazing grace and agility, the researchers hope to  help small airborne robots mimic these maneuvers.
    U.S. defense agencies, which have funded this research, are  supporting the development of bug-size flyers to carry out  reconnaissance, search-and-rescue and environmental monitoring missions  without risking human lives. These devices are commonly called micro  aerial vehicles or MAVs.
   "For military missions in particular, these MAVs must be able to fly  successfully through complex urban environments, where there can be  tight spaces and turbulent gusts of wind," said Tiras Lin, a Whiting  School of Engineering undergraduate who has been conducting the  high-speed video research. "These flying robots will need to be able to  turn quickly. But one area in which MAVs are lacking is  maneuverability."
To address that shortcoming, Lin has been studying butterflies.  "Flying insects are capable of performing a dazzling variety of flight  maneuvers," he said. "In designing MAVs, we can learn a lot from flying  insects."
Lin's research has been supervised by Rajat Mittal, a professor of  mechanical engineering. "This research is important because it attempts  to not only address issues related to bio-inspired design of MAVs, but  it also explores fundamental questions in biology related to the limits  and capabilities of flying insects," Mittal said.
To conduct this study, Lin has been using high-speed video to look at  how changes in mass distribution associated with the wing flapping and  body deformation of a flying insect help it engage in rapid aerial  twists and turns. Lin, a junior mechanical engineering major from San  Rafael, Calif., recently presented some of his findings at the annual  meeting of the American Physical Society's Division of Fluid Dynamics.  The student also won second-prize for his presentation of this research  at a regional meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and  Astronautics.
    "Ice skaters who want to spin faster bring their arms in close to  their bodies and extend their arms out when they want to slow down," Lin  said. "These positions change the spatial distribution of a skater's  mass and modify their moment of inertia; this in turn affects the  rotation of the skater's body. An insect may be able to do the same  thing with its body and wings."
Butterflies move too quickly for someone to see these wing tactics  clearly with the naked eye, so Lin, working with graduate student  Lingxiao Zheng, used high-speed, high-resolution videogrammetry to  mathematically document the trajectory and body conformation of painted  lady butterflies. They accomplished this with three video cameras  capable of recording 3,000 one-megapixel images per second. (By  comparison, a standard video camera shoots 24, 30 or 60 frames per  second.)
The Johns Hopkins researchers anchored their cameras in fixed  positions and focused them on a small region within a dry transparent  aquarium tank. For each analysis, several butterflies were released  inside the tank. When a butterfly veered into the focal area, Lin  switched on the cameras for about two seconds, collecting approximately  6,000 three-dimensional views of the insect's flight maneuvers. From  these frames, the student typically homed in on roughly one-fifth of a  second of flight, captured in 600 frames. "Butterflies flap their wings  about 25 times per second," Lin said. "That's why we had to take so many  pictures."
The arrangement of the three cameras allowed the researchers to  capture three-dimensional data and analyze the movement of the insects'  wings and bodies in minute detail. That led to a key discovery.
    Earlier published research pointed out that an insect's delicate  wings possess very little mass compared to the bug's body. As a result,  those scholars concluded that changes in spatial distribution of mass  associated with wing flapping did not need to be considered in analyzing  an insect's flight maneuverability and stability. "We found out that  this commonly accepted assumption was not valid, at least for insects  such as butterflies," Lin said. "We learned that changes in moment of  inertia, which is a property associated with mass distribution, plays an  important role in insect flight, just as arm and leg motion does for  ice skaters and divers."
He said this discovery should be considered by MAV designers and may be useful to biologists who study insect flight dynamics.
    Lin's newest project involves even smaller bugs. With support from a  Johns Hopkins Provost's Undergraduate Research Award, he has begun  aiming his video cameras at fruit flies, hoping to solve the mystery of  how these insects manage to land upside down on perches.
The insect flight dynamics research was funded by the U.S. Air Force  Office of Scientific Research and the National Science Foundation.