A novel hypothesis for how albatrosses optimize their flight physics in real-time: an extremum seeking model and control for dynamic soaring
Sameer Pokhrel, Sameh A. Eisa

TL;DR
This paper introduces an extremum seeking control framework to model and simulate albatross dynamic soaring, enabling real-time, autonomous energy-efficient flight without detailed wind or objective function models.
Contribution
It presents the first extremum seeking approach for dynamic soaring, demonstrating stability and real-time capability through simulations and comparisons with existing optimal control methods.
Findings
Proves dynamic soaring can be modeled as an extremum seeking problem
Shows the framework achieves stable, real-time autonomous flight
Provides simulation results supporting the approach's effectiveness
Abstract
The albatross optimized flight maneuver -- known as dynamic soaring -- is nothing but a wonder of biology, physics, and engineering. By utilizing dynamic soaring, the bird can travel in the desired flight direction almost for free by harvesting energy from the wind. Dynamic soaring biological inspiration has triggered a momentous interest among many communities of science and engineering. Studying, modeling, and simulating dynamic soaring have been conducted in literature by mostly configuring dynamic soaring as an optimal control problem. Said configuration requires accurate dynamic system modeling of the albatross/mimicking-object, accurate wind profile models, and a defined mathematical formula of an objective function that aims at conserving energy and minimizing its dissipation. However, the experimental observations of albatrosses indicate their ability to conduct dynamic soaring…
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