Chapter 5: Flight Part 2 Flashcards
2 Types of Non powered flight
- Gliding and Soaring
Name 2 types of Soaring
- static soaring and dynamic soaring
Name 2 types of Static Soaring
- thermal soaring(on rising thermals) and slope soaring (on rising air along a slope)
Gliding Flight
- non-powered
- losing altitude over time, constant flight speed
- used by birds with any wing shape
How do birds restore stability during passive gliding?
- if sudden wind gust causes bird to roll, it will slide slip down and to the right
- as this occurs, angle relative to the wind velocity increases on one wing and the effectve lift is greater on the other wing
- this together creates a restorative roll to the left
Describe how static soaring coccurs by thermals
- Exploit columns of warm air that rise when the ground is heated by the sun
- Have slots between the primary flight feathers at the tip of the wing
- Permit each primary to act as an individual “winglet:” reduces the induced drag of the wing tip by redistributing the trailing vortices horizontally and vertically
(circle of air generates lift)
ex: vultures, hawks, eagles
Describe the process of Static soaring while in flight
- a soaring bird circles upward with the column of rising air
- Then glides down to the base of another adjacent thermal - allows the bird to cover great distances with minimal energy
- birds with slotted-high lift wings
Soaring
- nonpowered flight
- gliding with no loss in altitude, either horizontal or rising flight
Dynamic Soaring
- bird uses wing speed gradients and its own momentum
- used by birds with high-aspect ratio wings
- Turning into the wind to gain altitude and then gliding down across the wind to gain speed
- wing current heading towards them helps generate lift
Example: Sea birds, can fly continuously across the wind without any expenditure of mechanical energy by alternating their flight direction in an S-pattern
Powered Flight
- flapping, bird provides thrust
- most often used by birds with elliptical or high-speed wings
Describe the Ring Vortex
- Taking off and at slow speeds when the induced drag is high
- force only used in downstroke, upstroke dynamically passive
Describe the Continuous Vortex
- used in faster forward flight
- vortex between upstrokes AND downstrokes
How can the tail restore stability in flight?
- it steers like a steering wheel
- it restores torque and moves the yaw angle back to the flight velocity pathway
- removes unequal drag
What is the only type of bird that can hover under its own power and how does happen?
- hummingbird
- consistent hovering from
- wings beat vertically during forward flight to generate forward thrust
- In hovering flight, the wings beat horizontally in the pattern of a flattened figure eight
(backwards flight: tilts angle of wing action and inverts camber of wing to create rear-directed thrust0
What are the two main types of intermittent flight?
- flap gliding and flap bounding