Very small insects use novel wing flapping and drag principle to generate the weight-supporting vertical force
Xin Cheng, Mao Sun

TL;DR
Tiny insects like Encarsia formosa use a novel combination of wing motions, including rowing and Weis-Fogh fling, to generate vertical lift primarily through drag, overcoming viscous effects that hinder traditional lift mechanisms.
Contribution
This study reveals that very small insects employ unique wing kinematics, combining rowing and fling motions, to generate vertical force via drag, a mechanism not previously documented.
Findings
Rowing produces 70% of vertical force
Weis-Fogh fling contributes 30%
Unsteady drag is significantly greater than steady drag
Abstract
The effect of air viscosity on the flow around an insect wing increases as insect size decreases. For the smallest insects (wing length R below 1 mm), the viscous effect is so large that lift-generation mechanisms used by their larger counterparts become ineffective. How the weight-supporting vertical force is generated is unknown. To elucidate the aerodynamic mechanisms responsible, we measure the wing kinematics of the tiny wasp Encarsia formosa (0.6 mm R) in hovering or very slow ascending flight and compute and analyze the aerodynamic forces. We find that the insects perform two unusual wing-motions. One is rowing: the wings move fast downward and backward, like stroking oars; the other is the previously discovered Weis-Fogh fling. The rowing produces 70 percent of the required vertical force and the Weis-Fogh fling the other 30 percent. The oaring wing mainly produces an…
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