Biomimickry continues to improve and refine specialized drones and flying robots. Mindy Weisberger at LiveScience dives into an issue of The Royal Society’s journal Interface Focus on coevolving advances in animal flight and aerial robotics.
The issue’s editor, David Lentink weighed in on the renaissance:
“Most people think that since we know how to design airplanes, we know all there is to know about flight,” Lentink said. But once humans could successfully design planes and rockets, they stopped looking as closely at flying animals as they had in the past, he added. Now, however, growing demand for small, maneuverable flying robots that can perform a variety of tasks has sparked a scientific “renaissance” and is driving researchers to investigate many open questions about animal aerodynamics and biology, Lentink said.
• New Flying Robots Take Cues From Airborne Animals (LiveScience)