A Dynamics and Stability Framework for Avian Jumping Take-off
Ben Parslew, Girupakaran Sivalingam, William Crowther

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework to analyze stability during avian jumping take-off, revealing small stability margins and the importance of angular acceleration in maintaining control, supported by simulations of real bird data.
Contribution
It introduces graphical stability margins for bird take-off and demonstrates how angular acceleration influences stability, with validation on real bird kinematic data.
Findings
Stability margins are small but critical for take-off control.
Nose-up angular acceleration extends stability bounds.
Simulations show foot torque reactions increase stable take-off angles.
Abstract
Jumping take-off in birds is an explosive behaviour with the goal of providing a rapid transition from ground to airborne locomotion. An effective jump is predicated on the need to maintain dynamic stability through the acceleration phase. The present study concerns understanding how birds retain control of body attitude and trajectory during take-off. Cursory observation suggests that stability is achieved with relatively little cost. However, analysis of the problem shows that the stability margins during jumping are actually very small and that stability considerations play a significant role in selection of appropriate jumping kinematics. We use theoretical models to understand stability in prehensile take-off (from a perch) and also in non-prehensile take-off (from the ground). The primary instability is tipping, defined as rotation of the centre of gravity about the ground contact…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotic Locomotion and Control · Biomimetic flight and propulsion mechanisms · Sports Dynamics and Biomechanics
