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  • Talker

    Spooky drone can crash into trees and perch just like a bat

    By Talker News,

    4 days ago

    By Dean Murray via SWNS

    A creepy bat-like drone can crash into trees and perch.

    The innovation sees the vehicle smash into the trunk and fold its wings around to hug it to keep it in place.

    The gliding-winged robot, called PercHug , can also latch onto poles and could be used for inspection, maintenance, and biodiversity conservation.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0OD7BN_0uVdnU7m00
    Screenshot from a video of the PercHug drone being tested by crashing into a tree and hugging it.
    (EPFL via SWNS)

    A team from the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL) says they have taken influence from flying squirrels and geckos, the latter of which exhibits head-first "crash-landing".

    The researchers say: "While flying animals substantially reduce their kinetic energy at landing by wing flapping, specialized gliders, like flying squirrels and geckos, land on trees at high speeds and endure elevated forces utilizing their limbs or head.

    "We took inspiration from flying geckos, which exhibit head-first crash-landing at speeds."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=21Zymc_0uVdnU7m00
    A computer render of the PercHug drone. (EPFL via SWNS)

    Perching with winged Unmanned Aerial Vehicles has often been solved by means of complex control or intricate appendages.

    The team investigated a method that relies on passive wing morphing for crash-landing on trees and other types of vertical poles.

    An upturned nose design means the robot can passively reorient from horizontal flight to vertical upon a head-on crash with a pole, followed by hugging with its wings to perch.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2Zqxf5_0uVdnU7m00
    (EPFL via SWNS)

    The team says: "Inspired by the adaptability of animals’ and bats’ limbs in gripping and holding onto trees, we design dual-purpose wings that enable both aerial gliding and perching on poles."

    They were able to demonstrate "crash-perching" on tree trunks with an overall success rate of 73%

    "The method opens up new possibilities for the use of aerial robots in applications such as inspection, maintenance, and biodiversity conservation," the team add.

    A paper on the project is published in the journal Communications Engineering .

    The post Spooky drone can crash into trees and perch just like a bat appeared first on Talker .

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