Perch like a bird: bio-inspired optimal maneuvers and nonlinear control for Flapping-Wing Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
C. Ruiz, J. \'A. Acosta

TL;DR
This paper presents a bio-inspired control strategy for unmanned aerial vehicles with flapping wings, enabling stable and optimal perching maneuvers by mimicking bird flight dynamics and adaptive control principles.
Contribution
It introduces a novel optimal maneuver and nonlinear adaptive controller for perching, inspired by avian flight, with validation against real bird trajectories.
Findings
Successful demonstration of stable perching maneuvers
Controller adapts to disturbances effectively
High fidelity with bird perching trajectories
Abstract
This research endeavors to design the perching maneuver and control in ornithopter robots. By analyzing the dynamic interplay between the robot's flight dynamics, feedback loops, and the environmental constraints, we aim to advance our understanding of the perching maneuver, drawing parallels to biological systems. Inspired by the elegant control strategies observed in avian flight, we develop an optimal maneuver and a corresponding controller to achieve stable perching. The maneuver consists of a deceleration and a rapid pitch-up (vertical turn), which arises from analytically solving the optimization problem of minimal velocity at perch, subject to kinematic and dynamic constraints. The controller for the flapping frequency and tail symmetric deflection is nonlinear and adaptive, ensuring robustly stable perching. Indeed, such adaptive behavior in a sense incorporates homeostatic…
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