Aerodynamics of gliding flight in common swifts.
(2011) In Journal of Experimental Biology 214(Pt 3). p.382-393- Abstract
- Gliding flight performance and wake topology of a common swift (Apus apus L.) were examined in a wind tunnel at speeds between 7 and 11 m s(-1). The tunnel was tilted to simulate descending flight at different sink speeds. The swift varied its wingspan, wing area and tail span over the speed range. Wingspan decreased linearly with speed, whereas tail span decreased in a nonlinear manner. For each airspeed, the minimum glide angle was found. The corresponding sink speeds showed a curvilinear relationship with airspeed, with a minimum sink speed at 8.1 m s(-1) and a speed of best glide at 9.4 m s(-1). Lift-to-drag ratio was calculated for each airspeed and tilt angle combinations and the maximum for each speed showed a curvilinear... (More)
- Gliding flight performance and wake topology of a common swift (Apus apus L.) were examined in a wind tunnel at speeds between 7 and 11 m s(-1). The tunnel was tilted to simulate descending flight at different sink speeds. The swift varied its wingspan, wing area and tail span over the speed range. Wingspan decreased linearly with speed, whereas tail span decreased in a nonlinear manner. For each airspeed, the minimum glide angle was found. The corresponding sink speeds showed a curvilinear relationship with airspeed, with a minimum sink speed at 8.1 m s(-1) and a speed of best glide at 9.4 m s(-1). Lift-to-drag ratio was calculated for each airspeed and tilt angle combinations and the maximum for each speed showed a curvilinear relationship with airspeed, with a maximum of 12.5 at an airspeed of 9.5 m s(-1). Wake was sampled in the transverse plane using stereo digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV). The main structures of the wake were a pair of trailing wingtip vortices and a pair of trailing tail vortices. Circulation of these was measured and a model was constructed that showed good weight support. Parasite drag was estimated from the wake defect measured in the wake behind the body. Parasite drag coefficient ranged from 0.30 to 0.22 over the range of airspeeds. Induced drag was calculated and used to estimate profile drag coefficient, which was found to be in the same range as that previously measured on a Harris' hawk. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1777556
- author
- Henningsson, Per LU and Hedenström, Anders LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2011
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- common swift, Apus apus, aerodynamics, gliding flight, wake, wind tunnel, digital particle image velocimetry, DPIV
- in
- Journal of Experimental Biology
- volume
- 214
- issue
- Pt 3
- pages
- 382 - 393
- publisher
- The Company of Biologists Ltd
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000286807900012
- scopus:79251523525
- pmid:21228197
- ISSN
- 1477-9145
- DOI
- 10.1242/jeb.050609
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- fa2433cd-a4d6-4146-9ed0-02d1a21ad8fd (old id 1777556)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 09:55:26
- date last changed
- 2024-05-05 22:59:27
@article{fa2433cd-a4d6-4146-9ed0-02d1a21ad8fd, abstract = {{Gliding flight performance and wake topology of a common swift (Apus apus L.) were examined in a wind tunnel at speeds between 7 and 11 m s(-1). The tunnel was tilted to simulate descending flight at different sink speeds. The swift varied its wingspan, wing area and tail span over the speed range. Wingspan decreased linearly with speed, whereas tail span decreased in a nonlinear manner. For each airspeed, the minimum glide angle was found. The corresponding sink speeds showed a curvilinear relationship with airspeed, with a minimum sink speed at 8.1 m s(-1) and a speed of best glide at 9.4 m s(-1). Lift-to-drag ratio was calculated for each airspeed and tilt angle combinations and the maximum for each speed showed a curvilinear relationship with airspeed, with a maximum of 12.5 at an airspeed of 9.5 m s(-1). Wake was sampled in the transverse plane using stereo digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV). The main structures of the wake were a pair of trailing wingtip vortices and a pair of trailing tail vortices. Circulation of these was measured and a model was constructed that showed good weight support. Parasite drag was estimated from the wake defect measured in the wake behind the body. Parasite drag coefficient ranged from 0.30 to 0.22 over the range of airspeeds. Induced drag was calculated and used to estimate profile drag coefficient, which was found to be in the same range as that previously measured on a Harris' hawk.}}, author = {{Henningsson, Per and Hedenström, Anders}}, issn = {{1477-9145}}, keywords = {{common swift; Apus apus; aerodynamics; gliding flight; wake; wind tunnel; digital particle image velocimetry; DPIV}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{Pt 3}}, pages = {{382--393}}, publisher = {{The Company of Biologists Ltd}}, series = {{Journal of Experimental Biology}}, title = {{Aerodynamics of gliding flight in common swifts.}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.050609}}, doi = {{10.1242/jeb.050609}}, volume = {{214}}, year = {{2011}}, }