Effect of wing flexibility on flight dynamics stability of flapping wing MAVs in forward flight

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Effect of wing flexibility on flight dynamics stability of flapping wing MAVs in forward flight"

Transcription

1 Article Effect of wing flexibility on flight dynamics stability of flapping wing MAVs in forward flight International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles 2016, Vol. 8(3) ! The Author(s) 2016 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalspermissions.nav DOI: / mav.sagepub.com Dong Xue, Bifeng Song, Wenping Song and Wenqing Yang Abstract The paper presents a qualitative study of the effect of the wing flexibility on the flight stability of flapping wing micro air vehicles in forward flight. The longitudinal dynamic flight stability is compared between rigid wing flapping wing micro air vehicles and flexible-wing flapping wing micro air vehicles. The aerodynamics derivatives are computed respectively using the method of computational fluid dynamics and fluid structure interaction method, and the techniques of eigenvalue and eigenvector analysis are applied to solve the equations of motion. It is shown that the flexibility can change the stability properties of the flapping micro air vehicles from unstable to stable. Besides, the position of mass center of flapping micro air vehicles is also a key factor to the flight stability, which provides a new insight to design a stable flapping wing micro air vehicle. Keywords Flight dynamics, flapping wing micro air vehicles, fluid structure interaction, computational fluid dynamics Date received: 30 March 2016; accepted: 13 May 2016 Introduction In the last 20 years, flapping wing micro air vehicle (FMAV) has aroused intense interests from researchers because of their potential to dramatically strengthen our sensing and information gathering capabilities. 1 In order to design a series of FMAVs with high aerodynamic efficiency and maneuverability, researchers have devoted much effort to handle the challenging problems, including unsteady aerodynamics, aero-elasticity, nonlinear flight dynamics, etc. Several FMAVs have already been designed and fabricated successfully to accomplish the military and civilian mission, such as the American Hummingbird and Chinese Dove. 2 Insects and birds in nature with outstanding flying skills in a broad range of low Reynolds number provide best inspiration for researchers to develop the FMAV. Taylor and Thomas 3 made the first formal quantitative research of dynamic stability of the desert locust using the linear six-dof dynamic model, whose aerodynamic derivatives obtained experimentally. However, this experimental approach had to depend on some control responses by insects. In order to avoid such problem, Sun and Xiong 4 used the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) method to compute the aerodynamics derivatives, which were applied for eigenvalue and eigenvector analysis to study the longitudinal and lateral stability in several hovering insects. 4,5 In the above analysis, it is notable that both studies are based on two assumptions. One is that the flapping wing system was assumed to be a time-invariant model through neglecting the wing mass and averaging the aerodynamic forces over a wing flapping cycle (averaged model). In order to consider the effect of the periodic effect and nonlinearity of the aerodynamic forces, a nonlinear rigid body model of an insect was developed by Bierling and Patil. 6 The stability of the linearized, time-averaged system was first calculated and then the stability of the time-variant system was studied using Floquet theory. When the wing mass was less than 1% of the total mass, both approaches obtained similar results. Sun et al. 5 obtained same conclusion when they used same method to study two hovering School of Aeronautics, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi an City, P.R. China Corresponding author: Wenping Song, School of Aeronautics, Northwestern Polytechnical University, P.O. Box 120, No. 127, West Youyi Road, Beilin, Xi an City, Shaanxi Province, P.R. China. wpsongnwpu.edu.cn Creative Commons Non Commercial CC-BY-NC: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial 3.0 License ( which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (

2 Xue et al. 171 model of insects: a dragonfly and a hawk moth. They concluded the model with relatively high wing-beat frequency and small wing-mass to body-mass ratio is suitable for the averaged model theory. In the present paper, the research model is Chines Dove, as shown in Figure 1, whose wing-beat frequency is around Hz and wing mass-to-body mass ratio is 2.0%. Table 1 presents the flapping frequency and forward velocity of DelFly II and Cockatoo of the same size in comparison with Chinese Dove. According to Caetano et al., 7 if the single wing-mass to body-mass ratio of FWMAVs is under 2.8%, application of single rigid body kinematics for the dynamic simulation can ensure that considerable information is not lost. Consequently, Chinese Dove can be approximately treated as an averaged model and linearized system. Another assumption is that the wing is rigid. There is no formal quantitative study or even qualitative discussion about the effect of wing deformation on flight dynamics stability. Despite Sun 8 discussed the effect of wing deformation on flight dynamics for insects and concluded that relatively small deformation produces negligibly small variations in aerodynamic force during the disturbed motion and hence cannot influence the stability properties. However, by observing birds flight, it can be seen that they can actively and dramatically change the camber of wings to make the best use of aerodynamics. 9 At the same time, since using lightweight structures, there is also relatively large passive wing deformation for bird-like FMAV compared with the insects In conclusion, the influence of wing flexibility on flight stability cannot be neglected as insects. In the present paper, the longitudinal dynamic flight stability of Chinese Dove is studied. By the method of CFD and FSI, the aerodynamic derivatives of FMAV with rigid wing and flexible wing are obtained respectively. The remainder of the paper is organized as follows: First, conditions for equilibrium of two different FMAVs in forward flight were calculated. Second, the aerodynamic derivatives of two different FMAVs at equilibrium flight were obtained. Then, employing the method of eigenvalue and eigenvector analysis, the longitudinal dynamic flight stability of two different FMAVs was analyzed. Finally, the influence of position of mass center on flight stability is also discussed and studied. Methodology Materials The wing of FMAV is a quarter-elliptic platform, as shown in Figure 1. Wings are manufactured by unidirectional carbon fiber forming the wing skeleton and polyester film used as skin. The geometric and elastic parameters of each part are shown in Figure 2 and Table 2. L denotes the length of carbon rods; D denotes the diameter of rods; E is the Young s modulus; G is the shear modulus of cross-section; is the density of rods. E and G are experimental data obtained by American Instron Material Testing Equipment. Equations of motion Similar to Sun and Xiong, 4 the rigid body approximation is presumed: in the present case of symmetric longitudinal motion, the FMAV is treated as a rigid body of three degrees of freedom and the cyclic forces and moments of the flapping motion are replaced by the wing-flapping-cycle average aerodynamic forces, moments and inertial forces, while assuming the gyroscopic forces of wing to be negligible. Figure 1. DOVE FMAV. Table 1. Some classical FMAV and bird species of the same size in comparison with Chinese Dove. Parameters DelFly II Cockatoo Chinese Dove Flapping frequency 8 Hz 7.5 Hz Hz Averaged forward speed 7 m/s 4.4 m/s 10 m/s Wing-to-body mass ratio 1.8% 7% 2% Figure 2. Geometry of flapping wing (mm).

3 172 International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles 8(3) Table 2. The geometric parameters and elastic properties of wing. Part L (mm) D (mm) E (GPa) G (GPa) (g/cm3) Fore-beam Rear-beam Rib Membrane / / 0.15 / 1.15 According to Taylor and Thomas, 3 the origin o of a non-inertial body coordinate system o-x-y-z is at the center of mass of the FMAV and the pitch angle between the horizontal and the x-axis is represented by. The forward (u) and dorso-ventral (w) components of velocity are along x- and z- axes, respectively, and the pitching angular velocity around the center of mass is represented by q. The inherently non-linear equations of motion could be linearized by slightly disturbing the FMAVs motion supposing that FMAV is in a steady forward flight and flight condition is symmetric about x-z plane. The linearized results 16 are: 2 3 X u X w X q 2 3 _u m m m w e g cos e 2 3 u _w Z u Z w Z q _q 5 ¼ m m m þ u e g sin e w 6 7 M u M w M 6 q 4 q _ 4 I yy I yy I yy where X u, X w, X q, Z u, Z w, Z q, M u, M w, and M q are the aerodynamic derivatives about each variables. And X and Z denotes the x- and z-components of the aerodynamic force of the wing assuming the body s aerodynamic effects negligible, respectively, and M represents the aerodynamic pitching moment; m is the mass of the FMAV; g represents the gravitational acceleration; I yy is the pitching moment of inertia about y axis; u and w denote the x and z component of the velocity of the mass center of the FMAV, respectively; the symbol represents a small disturbance quantity. In order to analyze the system conveniently, we set the pitch rate derivatives to be zero, which is discussed and proved to be feasible conditionally by Taylor and Thomas 3 Consequently, the longitudinal system matrices are only composed of the static stability derivatives (i.e.x u, X w, Z u, Z w, M u, and M w ). In forward flight, the equations can be further simplified because w, q, can be set to zero. is zero since the x-axis can be aligned with horizontal, and the forces ð1þ and moments are in equilibrium so X ¼ 0, Z ¼ mg and M ¼ 0. With these simplifications, we may write the equation of motion for non-maneuvering flight as Flow solver 2 3 X u X w g _u m m 2 3 u _w Z u Z w _q 5 ¼ m m u e 0 w 6 7 M u M 6 w 4 q _ 4 I yy I yy By solving the three-dimensional unsteady compressible Navier Stokes equations, 17 the unsteady aerodynamics of the flapping wing can be derived as ZZZ ZZ ZZ D ½WŠdV þ H Dt 0 nds ¼ H nds ð3þ where [W] is the state vector of conservative variables; is the control volume; S, n are the boundary of control volume and its unit-normal outer vector, respectively; and H 0, H v represent inviscid and viscous fluxes, respectively. To develop a robust and efficient aerodynamic analysis method suitable for design of wing and complex configuration, Han et al. 18 presented and studied a combination of matrix preconditioning and multigrid method. Choi and Merkle 19 preconditioning matrix was used to precondition the time derivatives of three-dimensional Navier Stokes equations. A cellcentered finite-volume method was used to solve the governing equations and time-stepping method utilized a lower upper symmetric-gauss-seidel (LU-SGS) method 20 with multigrid acceleration, 21 and turbulence model employed here is the k-! shear stress transport (SST) model. 22 Because there is a large scale of movement and deformation for the flexible flapping wing flight, it needs to develop an automatic mesh generation code. Based on the infinite interpolation, a moving grid methodology is applied for automatic mesh generation of the flexible flapping motion. A CO-type body-fitted grid is generated and used for the aerodynamic calculation. The outer boundary of grid is set at 20 chord lengths in the spanwise direction. Moderate and fine meshes with and grid nodes are used for grid test, respectively. To verify the reasonability of time steps, the moderate-grid simulations are performed using 72 and 144 time steps per period, respectively. Figure 3 shows lift coefficients of above aforementioned three cases when the angle of attack equals 4, forward speed is 4 m s 1, and the flapping ð2þ

4 Xue et al. 173 Figure 3. Test of grid and time steps per period. amplitude is 70. Through comparison, though there is little discrepancies between three cases, the moderate grid and time steps provide a sufficiently good accuracy for the simulation considering the computational cost, especially for the calculation of averaged aerodynamic forces. Therefore, the moderate spatial and temporal resolutions are used in the following studies. Figure 4 shows the grid topology of the flapping wing generated by the grid generation code. Structure solver Based on Timoshenko beam theory, a kind of beam element is applied to simulate the wing skeleton made from carbon fiber. The global mass matrix [M], the global stiffness matrix [K], and the global force vector [F] can be obtained by assembling the element connectivity matrix, the elemental matrices, and force vectors. The equations of motion can be presented as ½MŠ q þ½kš q ¼ Ft ðþ ð4þ A Newmark solution is used to solve equation (4). 23 As mentioned in Xue et al., 24 there is no prestress on the membrane, which approximates that only the skeleton bears the bending loads, so it is feasible to only consider the wing skeleton during structural modeling and distribute the mass of membrane on the skeleton to consider the inertial loads of it. Table 3 shows the parameters of finite element model of wing skeleton. If the structural damping effect is ignored, the transverse displacement y(x,t) of an elastic cantilever beam, with Young modulus E, moment of inertia I, density, cross-section A, and external applied loads q(x,t), satisfies the equation of bending waves x 2 EI 2 y x 2 þ A 2 y t 2 ¼ qx, ð tþ ð5þ Figure 4. Topology of the grid distribution of the wing. Table 3. Parameters of finite element model of wing skeleton. FEA model When the beam root is prescribed as a sinusoidal angular velocity, like flapping wing, the inertial loads can be expressed as qx, ð tþ ¼ kx cos ð! e tþ ð6þ Assuming transverse vibration with uniform crosssection is the linear combination of all the natural modes yðx, tþ ¼ Xn i¼1 Y i ðxþ i ðþ t where i ðþis t the normal coordinate, and substituting equation (7) in equation (5) leads to X n Wing skeleton Element type B32 (a spatial beam that uses quadratic interpolation) Element number 130 Node member 256 Cross Circular Boundary condition Fixed at two root points EIY 00 00i i ðþþa t Xn Y i i ¼ qx, ð tþ ð8þ i¼1 i¼1 By multiplying both sides of equation by Y i, and integral x in [0,l], function can be transformed to i þ! 2 i i ¼ q i ðþ t ð7þ ð9þ

5 174 International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles 8(3) where q i ðþ¼ t Z l 0 qx, ð tþy i ðxþdx ¼ h cos ð! ex tþ ð10þ In the case of y(x),0 ¼ 0, y t ðx,0þ¼0, j ¼ 0, _ j ¼ 0. When! j 6¼! e, the specific solution of the differential equation can be obtained h i ¼! 2 ðcos ð! i! 2 e tþcos ð! i tþþ ð11þ e The transverse vibration can be expressed as yðx, tþ ¼ Xn i¼1 Fluid structure interaction Y i ðxþ i ðþ t ð12þ The method for fluid structure interaction (FSI) is same as that in Yang et al. 15 Yang et al has focused on the flapping wing aerodynamic simulation through developing a three-dimensional unsteady Navier Stokes solver, which is also proved to be an effective and robust tool in FMAV aerodynamic simulation, especially for the flexible wing. The geometry is discretized in a different way for the CFD and CSD. The radial basis functions (RBFs) are applied for the information interaction between the fluid and structure solvers. The brief description of FSI process is given as follows: first the periodic aerodynamic force is obtained by fluid solver; Second, load the periodical aerodynamic force on the structure, and periodic structural deformation can be simulated by structural dynamic solver; then add the periodical deformation on the original mesh, then the periodic aerodynamic force is simulated again until both the structural deformation and the aerodynamic forces between two continuous time steps are convergent. It was tested and validated by comparing with experimental results in wind tunnel. 15 The calculated lift coefficients of flapping wing correlate well with the experimental results. The trend of computational thrust coefficients is consistent with the experimental and can be amended by taking account of the effects of wind tunnel wall interference as well as support interference on aerodynamic force. Hence, the FSI solver can be approximately considered reliable. Force and moment equilibrium As is known to us, the wing flexibility within a certain extent can dramatically improve the thrust force. 12,13 Thus, FMAVs with rigid wing and flexible wing correspond different cruising speed when the flapping frequency is 10 Hz, which leads to different weight and payloads. In the present study, the weight of FMAV and the extra moment supplied by horizontal tail are all tunable as the occasion demands in order to satisfy the force and moment equilibrium. The cruising speed in forward flight is obtained based on the force equilibrium (averaged thrust equals averaged drag). According to the calculated results using CFD and FSI method, the average lift forces of FMAVs with rigid wing and flexible wing are N and N, respectively. Thus, the weight of FMAVs is 40 g and 279 g corresponding different wing according to the equilibrium relationship that weight equals lift forces. And the angle of attack is not treated as a known input parameter for the FMAV with rigid wing until force balance is satisfied when the angle of attack is set to 4, as shown in Figure 5. As is seen in Figures 5 and 6, conditions in equilibrium flight are all satisfied when the angle of attack equals 4 and velocity is 4 m s 1 and 14 m s 1, respectively, for FMAV with rigid wing and flexible wing. Table 4 presents the flow properties of trimmed computational model. Three complete flapping cycles have been calculated and results for the third cycle are only displayed. Figures 7 and 8 show the force coefficient of FMAV with rigid wing and flexible wing, respectively, when they are in the equilibrium state. Figure 9 presents the snapshots of deformation during a half flapping cycle when the wing is flapping down and the angle of attack is 4, the flow velocity is 14 m/s, flapping frequency is 10 Hz, and the flapping amplitude is 70. The solid line profile represents the rigid flapping position, and the color contour surface corresponds the deformable wing. Figure 10 displays the surface pressure (relative to the free-stream Figure 5. Determination of the equilibrium between average thrust and drag of FMAV with rigid wing by varying velocity and angle of attack.

6 Xue et al. 175 Figure 6. Determination of the equilibrium between average thrust and drag of FMAV with flexible wing by varying velocity. Figure 7. Force coefficient of FMAV with rigid wing during third flapping period. Table 4. Computational model of trimmed FMAV with different wing. Trimmed FMAV Flexible-wing Rigid wing Angle of attack 4 4 Flapping amplitude Flow velocity 14 m/s 4 m/s Air density 1.2 kg/m kg/m 3 Reynolds number Flapping frequency 10 Hz 10 Hz Reduced frequency mass N N Pitching moment kg m kg m 2 of inertia I yy Reference chord m m pressure) at the mid-plane during down stroke for the flexible wing. Results and analysis Results of aerodynamic derivatives After the equilibrium flight conditions have been determined, aerodynamic forces and moments are computed, respectively, when u and vary independently and slightly around the equilibrium value. After subtracted equilibrium value from each quantity, the variation of the non-dimensional aerodynamic forces and moments against each of u and is shown in Figures 11 to 14. As can be seen from the figures, X, Z, and M vary linearly against u and, while 0 8 and 0:9u e u 1:1u e indicate that there is a high linearization Figure 8. Force coefficient of FMAV with flexible wing during third flapping period. of the equations of motion and small disturbance assumption is reasonable. The non-dimensional aerodynamic derivatives X u, Y u, Z u, X, Y, and Z are estimated using the data in Figures 11 to 14. Since we only have X Y Z, here we take the same method as Taylor and Thomson used 3 to obtain X w Y w Z w. Hence, the w-derivatives are simply X w ¼ X w X u 1 e Z w ¼ Z w Z u 1 e M w ¼ M w M u 1 e ð13þ

7 176 International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles 8(3) Figure 12. The u-series force and moment data of FMAV with rigid wing. Figure 9. Structural deformation of flexible wing during down stroke extracted from the CSD results. Figure 10. Distribution of surface pressure coefficients at the mid-plane during down stroke of flexible wing (top view on left, bottom view on right). Figure 13. The -series force and moment data of FMAV with flexible wing. Figure 11. The -series force and moment data of FMAV with rigid wing. Based on equation (13), all six static stability derivatives for different FMAV can be obtained and the system matrix in equation (2) can also be fulfilled. Here, we transfer the non-dimensional coefficients to dimensional form for convenience, which are shown in Table 5. Comparing aerodynamic derivatives between rigid wing and flexible wing, there is a large scale of difference, which means the flexibility of wing affects the aerodynamics derivatives and properties significantly. It seems to be that the flexibility makes the aerodynamic derivatives smaller in general and less sensitive especially for the Z u, but except for the increase of the M w.

8 Xue et al. 177 Table 5. Dimensional aerodynamic derivatives with respect to forward speed U and attack angle for two FMAVs. FMAV X u Z u M u N S X w Z w M w N S Rigid Flexible Table 6. Eigenvalues of the system matrix of FMAV with rigid wing. Rigid wing Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 1,2 3 4 Figure 14. The u-series force and moment data of FMAV with flexible wing. Solution of the small disturbance equations The components in the system matrix of equation (2) are all acquired after the aerodynamic derivatives are calculated. The dynamic flight stability of the FMAVs can be analyzed by solving equation (2). The method for such a system of linear equations is presented in detail in many textbooks of flight dynamics. The results of eigenvalues and the corresponding eigenvectors are calculated and given in Tables 6 to 11. Rigid wing As seen in Table 6, for the FMAV with rigid wing, there are a pair of complex eigenvalues with a negative real part representing a stable oscillatory motion (mode 1), and one negative real eigenvalue representing a stable subsidence motion (mode 2) and one positive real eigenvalue representing an unstable divergence mode (mode 3). This is similar to Taylor and Thomson s results. 3 As is known to us, the disturbed motion is a linear combination of natural modes. When disturbed from its balanced flight, the disturbed motion of FMAV with rigid wing is a linear superposition of an unstable divergence mode, a pair of stable oscillatory modes, and a stable subsidence mode. Because the growth of the disturbed motion is determined by the unstable divergence mode, the system is unstable. The pair of complex conjugate roots ¼ n i! represents a damped oscillatory mode which has relatively short period (T ¼ s). The damping ratio represents the damping of the motion ¼ n=! 2 þ n ð14þ Eigenvalue i Table 7. Dimensional time constants of the natural modes of FMAV with rigid wing. Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Stability T t half Stability t half Stability t double Stable s s Stable s Stable s Table 8. Magnitudes and phase angles of the components of each of the three eigenvectors of FMAV with rigid wing. Stiff Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 u/u E 0.16(91.9 ) 1.50(0 ) 1.44(180 ) w/u E 0.95(143.5 ) 0.04(0 ) 0.09(180 ) q 10.53(162 ) 2.27(180 ) 0.98(0 ) Table 9. Eigenvalues of the system matrix. Flexible Model 1 Model 2 1,2 3,4 Eigenvalue i i Table 10. Dimensional time constants of the natural modes. Model 1 Model 2 Stability T t half Stability T t half Unstable Stable

9 178 International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles 8(3) Table 11. Magnitudes and phase angles of the components of each of the three eigenvectors. Flexible Model 1 Model 2 u/u e 0.048(88.9 ) 2.154(112.8 ) w/u e 1.0(12.2 ) 0.033(112.4 ) q (96.1 ) 0.329(114.3 ) which for the FMAV with rigid wing is ¼ Because when equals 1, it represents critical damping that the transition from sinusoidal to exponential motion, which denotes that the oscillatory mode is heavily damped. What s more, the static damping of the motion can be quantified by the time taken for an oscillatory mode to halve in magnitude, where t half ¼ ln 2 jnj ð15þ This yields times to halve that are approximately the same as a single period of oscillation. (t half ¼ s). Since the flapping frequency is 10 Hz (the wing-flapping period is T ¼ 0.1 s), thus the period of the oscillation for FMAV with rigid wing is about 19 times of the wingflapping period, and the starting value of the oscillation will be half in less than one wing-beats. t half or t double for the three modes and the period of the oscillatory mode and are presented in Table 7. It is known to us that the magnitudes and phases of the disturbance quantities of each mode are determined by the corresponding eigenvector. In order to compare eigenvector quantitatively, we have scaled them to make ¼ 1 and in polar form (as shown in Table 8). Scaling the eigenvectors makes the comparison of the two different FMAVs more conveniently. w can be converted to radian unit by normalizing w by u e in Table 8. Normalizing u by u e similarly brings u into the dimensionless form as w. We can see from Table 8 that for the oscillatory mode (first mode), the changes of forward velocity component (u) are insignificant. On the contrary, oscillatory changes in pitch rate (q) are notable. It seems to identify this oscillatory mode of FMAV with the short period pitching mode, which is intrinsically a rapid pitch oscillation with small varies in forward velocity. 28,29 On the contrary, change in the forward velocity component (u) and pitch rate (q) is obvious in the subsidence and divergence mode. But the phase of pitch rate (q) is completely opposite in these modes. Flexible wing Similarly, the eigenvalues and eigenvector of FMAV with flexible wing can be obtained using same method, as shown in Tables 9 to 11. As can be seen from Table 9, there are two pairs of complex eigenvalues with a negative real part, representing two stable oscillatory motion. Different from FMAV with rigid wing, the flight dynamic stability of FMAV with flexible wing is inherently stable. And it is shown in Table 10 that there is a short period mode (T ¼ S) and long period stable mode (T ¼ s). It is noticeable that such flight stability is very similar to that of fixed-wing aircraft whose longitudinal equations of motion also have two pairs of complex conjugate roots, the short period motion, and a much longer period known as phugoid mode. The latter mode is an interchange between kinetic and potential energy, which resulted in a steady rise and fall in altitude. 30 Normally, it is accompanied by slight changes in pitch and the angle of attack remains constant during the process. Similarly, when there is a disturbance of for the long period mode of FMAV with flexible wing, variations in the forward velocity component (u) are notable in the oscillatory mode, as shown in Table 11. Discussion The influence of the flexibility of wing of FMAV By comparing the flight stability of FMAV with different wing, it is concluded that the flexibility can indeed change the flight stability properties from unstable to stable. And in real forward flight, as the present research subject, the Dove FMAV with flexible wing performs well and inherently stably, which proves the above simulated results reliable and correct. However, this may not be suitable for all FMAV. Because the FMAV in the present paper is special, it cannot represent all kinds of FMAVs. It can only prove that at certain case, the flexibility indeed improves the flight stability even from unstable to stable. In order to figure out whether other factor influences the flight stability, especially in the course of design for FMAV, here, the influence of position of mass center is studied carefully. The influence of the position of mass center of FMAV In the present part, the influence of the position of mass center of FMAV on the dynamic stability of FMAV with flexible wing is studied and analyzed. Here, we calculate the eigenvalues corresponding to mass center position l of FMAV from 0.05 to 0.3 in 1000 intervals (the reference length from position of mass center to leading edge of the wing) as shown in Figure 15. Table 12 shows the aerodynamic derivatives of two

10 Xue et al. 179 Table 14. Eigenvalues of the system matrix. l Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 1, i Figure 15. Shift of center of gravity(c.g). Table 12. Dimensional aerodynamic derivatives. l X u Z u M u N S X w Z w M w N S Table 13. Eigenvalues of the system matrix. l Model 1 Model 2 1,2 3, i i Figure 16. Root locus plots of first pair complex eigenvalue. limiting cases: l ¼ 0:05 and l ¼ 0:3. It can be seen from the table that the position of mass center only influences the moment related derivatives and M w changes much more than M u, which means that M w is more sensitive than M u. The eigenvalues of system matrix of two limiting cases are shown in Tables 13 and 14. We can see that the mode changes from stable to unstable. In order to figure out how exactly the transformation develops, we calculate the results of system responding different M u and M w varying from stable state (l ¼ 0:05) to unstable state (l ¼ 0:3) in 1000 intervals as aforementioned. Since the eigenvalue is almost same when the M u changes within l changing, here we do not present the corresponding results. The evolution of the root locus plots of the eigenvalues is plotted in Figures 16 and 17. As we can see from the corresponding figures, the dynamic stability changes gently at first and keeps the real part of eigenvalue negative. With the position of mass center changing, the first pair of complex eigenvalue turns splits to be two positive eigenvalue and the second pair of complex eigenvalue turns to be two negative value, which means the states changes from unstable to stable. During the whole course of transformation, most of states are stable and there is a critical position of mass center that determine the boundary of stable and Figure 17. Root locus plots of second pair complex eigenvalue. unstable. If we can find the critical position of mass center, it will give an inspiration to the design of FMAV. Conclusion In the present paper, the effect of wing flexibility on the dynamic flight stability of FMAV in forward flight has been studied. An integrated aeroelasticity model of flapping wing flight was used to calculate the

11 180 International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles 8(3) aerodynamic derivatives. The techniques of eigenvalue and eigenvector analysis were used to solve the equations of motion and analyze the stability properties. To study the influence of wing flexibility on the stability of flapping flight, flight stability of two different FMAV with flexible and rigid wing was modeled and compared. For the rigid wing FMAV, the system is unstable. But when the wing is flexible, it was found that the inherent stability of the system changed from unstable to stable. Even though this example may be an exception, it proved to be an example that wing flexibility can change or even improve the stability of FMAV. What s more, the position of mass center is also a key factor for the stability properties of FMAV and could be applied in the design of FMAV. Declaration of conflicting interests The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Funding The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant nos , , and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, Grant no JCQ References 1. Shyy W, Aono H, Chimakurthi SK, et al. Recent progress in flapping wing aerodynamics and aeroelasticity. Prog Aerosp Sci 2010; 46: Yang W, Song B and Song W. The effects of span-wise and chord-wise flexibility on the aerodynamic performance of micro flapping-wing. Chin Sci Bull 2012; 57: Taylor GK and Thomas ALR. Dynamic flight stability in the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria. J Exp Biol 2003; 206: Sun M and Xiong Y. Dynamic flight stability of a hovering bumblebee. J Exp Biol 2005; 208: Sun M, Wang JK and Xiong Y. Dynamic flight stability of hovering insects. Acta Mech Sin 2007; 23: Bierling T and Patil M. Nonlinear dynamics and stability of flapping-wing flight. In: International forum on aeroelasticity and structural dynamics, Seattle, Washington, June Caetano JV, et al. Rigid-body kinematics versus flapping kinematics of a flapping wing micro air vehicle. J Guidance Control Dyn 2015; 38: Sun M. Insect flight dynamics: stability and control. Rev Modern Phys 2014; 86: Pennycuick CJ. Animal flight. London: Edward Arnold Publishers, Heathcote S, Martin D and Gursul I. Flexible flapping airfoil propulsion at zero freestream velocity. AIAA J 2004; 42: Heathcote S and Gursul I. Flexible flapping airfoil propulsion at low Reynolds numbers. AIAA J 2007; 45: Heathcote S, Wang Z and Gursul I. Effect of spanwise flexibility on flapping wing propulsion. J Fluid Struct 2008; 24: Wu P. Experimental characterization, design, analysis and optimization of flexible flapping wings for micro air vehicles. PhD Dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, Zhao L, Huang Q, Deng X, et al. Aerodynamic effects of flexibility in flapping wings. J R Br Soc Interface 2010; 7: Yang W, Song B, Wang L, et al. Dynamic fluid-structure coupling method of flexible flapping wing for MAV. J Aerosp Eng 2015; Etkin B. Dynamics of atmospheric flight. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., Anderson JD Jr. Computational fluid dynamics-the basics with applications. New York: McGraw-Hill, Han Z, He F, Song W, et al. A preconditioned multigrid method for efficient simulation of three-dimensional compressible and incompressible flows. Chin J Aeronaut 2007; 20: Choi YH and Merkle CL. The application of precondition in viscous flows. J Comput Phys 1993; 105: Yoon S and Jameson A. Lower-upper symmetric-gauss- Seidel method for the Euler and Navier-Stokes equations. AIAA paper Reston, VA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Venkatakrishnan V. Improved multigrid performance of compressible Navier-Stokes solvers. AIAA paper Reston, VA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Menter FR. Zonal two-equation k! turbulence model for aerodynamic flows. AIAA paper Reston, VA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Newmark NM. A method of computation for structural dynamics. J Eng Mech 1959; 85: Xue D, Song B and Yang W. Research on long periodical structural deformation of flexible flapping wing in flight. In: 29th congress of the international council of the aeronautical sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia, 7 12 September Yang W, Song B and Song W. Numerical simulation of 3D flapping wing based on chimera method. In: 26th international congress of aeronautic sciences, ICAS Secretariat, Bonn, Germany, September Yang W, Song B and Song W. Numerical study of flapping wing air vehicle based on chimera grid. AIAA In: 47th AIAA aerospace sciences meeting, Orlando, Florida, 5 8 January Reston, VA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. 27. Yang W, Song B and Song W. The effects of span-wise and chord-wise flexibility on the aerodynamic performance of micro flapping-wing. Chin Sci Bull 2012; 57: Nelson RC. Flight stability and automatic control. Singapore: McGraw-Hill, Cook MV. Flight dynamics: principles. London: Arnold, Lanchester FW. Aerodenetics. London: Constable, 1908.

Aeroelastic Analysis of Engine Nacelle Strake Considering Geometric Nonlinear Behavior

Aeroelastic Analysis of Engine Nacelle Strake Considering Geometric Nonlinear Behavior Aeroelastic Analysis of Engine Nacelle Strake Considering Geometric Nonlinear Behavior N. Manoj Abstract The aeroelastic behavior of engine nacelle strake when subjected to unsteady aerodynamic flows is

More information

Simulation of Aeroelastic System with Aerodynamic Nonlinearity

Simulation of Aeroelastic System with Aerodynamic Nonlinearity Simulation of Aeroelastic System with Aerodynamic Nonlinearity Muhamad Khairil Hafizi Mohd Zorkipli School of Aerospace Engineering, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, MALAYSIA Norizham Abdul Razak School

More information

The wings and the body shape of Manduca sexta and Agrius convolvuli are compared in

The wings and the body shape of Manduca sexta and Agrius convolvuli are compared in 1 Wing and body shape of Manduca sexta and Agrius convolvuli The wings and the body shape of Manduca sexta and Agrius convolvuli are compared in terms of the aspect ratio of forewing AR fw (wing length

More information

Implementing a Partitioned Algorithm for Fluid-Structure Interaction of Flexible Flapping Wings within Overture

Implementing a Partitioned Algorithm for Fluid-Structure Interaction of Flexible Flapping Wings within Overture 10 th Symposimum on Overset Composite Grids and Solution Technology, NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, California, USA 1 Implementing a Partitioned Algorithm for Fluid-Structure Interaction of Flexible

More information

Dynamic flight stability of a hovering bumblebee

Dynamic flight stability of a hovering bumblebee The Journal of Experimental iology 28, 447-459 Published by The Company of iologists 25 doi:1.1242/jeb.147 447 Dynamic flight stability of a hovering bumblebee Mao Sun* and Yan Xiong Institute of Fluid

More information

SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS OF THE FACTORS AFFECTING FORCE GENERATION BY WING FLAPPING MOTION

SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS OF THE FACTORS AFFECTING FORCE GENERATION BY WING FLAPPING MOTION Proceedings of the ASME 2013 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition IMECE2013 November 15-21, 2013, San Diego, California, USA IMECE2013-65472 SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS OF THE FACTORS

More information

ScienceDirect. Experimental Validation on Lift Increment of a Flapping Rotary Wing with Boring-hole Design

ScienceDirect. Experimental Validation on Lift Increment of a Flapping Rotary Wing with Boring-hole Design Available online at www.sciencedirect.com ScienceDirect Procedia Engineering 99 (2015 ) 1543 1547 APISAT2014, 2014 Asia-Pacific International Symposium on Aerospace Technology, APISAT2014 Experimental

More information

Dynamic flight stability of a hovering model insect: lateral motion

Dynamic flight stability of a hovering model insect: lateral motion Acta Mech Sin (010) 6:175 190 DOI 10.1007/s10409-009-00-1 RESEARCH PAPER Dynamic flight stability of a hovering model insect: lateral motion Yanlai Zhang Mao Sun Received: 18 May 009 / Revised: 5 August

More information

Near-Hover Dynamics and Attitude Stabilization of an Insect Model

Near-Hover Dynamics and Attitude Stabilization of an Insect Model 21 American Control Conference Marriott Waterfront, Baltimore, MD, USA June 3-July 2, 21 WeA1.4 Near-Hover Dynamics and Attitude Stabilization of an Insect Model B. Cheng and X. Deng Abstract In this paper,

More information

Dynamic Response of an Aircraft to Atmospheric Turbulence Cissy Thomas Civil Engineering Dept, M.G university

Dynamic Response of an Aircraft to Atmospheric Turbulence Cissy Thomas Civil Engineering Dept, M.G university Dynamic Response of an Aircraft to Atmospheric Turbulence Cissy Thomas Civil Engineering Dept, M.G university cissyvp@gmail.com Jancy Rose K Scientist/Engineer,VSSC, Thiruvananthapuram, India R Neetha

More information

Supplementary Section D: Additional Material Relating to Helicopter Flight Mechanics Models for the Case Study of Chapter 10.

Supplementary Section D: Additional Material Relating to Helicopter Flight Mechanics Models for the Case Study of Chapter 10. Supplementary Section D: Additional Material Relating to Helicopter Flight Mechanics Models for the Case Study of Chapter 1. D1 Nonlinear Flight-Mechanics Models and their Linearisation D1.1 Introduction

More information

Study on Numerical Simulation Method of Gust Response in Time Domain Jun-Li WANG

Study on Numerical Simulation Method of Gust Response in Time Domain Jun-Li WANG International Conference on Mechanics and Civil Engineering (ICMCE 4) Study on Numerical Simulation Method of Gust Response in Time Domain Jun-Li WANG School of Mechanical Engineering, Shaanxi University

More information

Stability and Control

Stability and Control Stability and Control Introduction An important concept that must be considered when designing an aircraft, missile, or other type of vehicle, is that of stability and control. The study of stability is

More information

Introduction to Flight Dynamics

Introduction to Flight Dynamics Chapter 1 Introduction to Flight Dynamics Flight dynamics deals principally with the response of aerospace vehicles to perturbations in their flight environments and to control inputs. In order to understand

More information

THE ANALYSIS OF LAMINATE LAY-UP EFFECT ON THE FLUTTER SPEED OF COMPOSITE STABILIZERS

THE ANALYSIS OF LAMINATE LAY-UP EFFECT ON THE FLUTTER SPEED OF COMPOSITE STABILIZERS THE ANALYSIS OF LAMINATE LAY-UP EFFECT ON THE FLUTTER SPEED OF COMPOSITE STABILIZERS Mirko DINULOVIĆ*, Boško RAŠUO* and Branimir KRSTIĆ** * University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, **

More information

Effects of Flexibility on the Aerodynamic Performance of Flapping Wings

Effects of Flexibility on the Aerodynamic Performance of Flapping Wings 6th AIAA Theoretical Fluid Mechanics Conference 27-30 June 2011, Honolulu, Hawaii AIAA 2011-3121 Effects of Flexibility on the Aerodynamic Performance of Flapping Wings Chang-kwon Kang 1, Hikaru Aono 2,

More information

APPLICATION OF ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORK IN MODELING OF ENTOMOPTER DYNAMICS

APPLICATION OF ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORK IN MODELING OF ENTOMOPTER DYNAMICS APPLICATION OF ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORK IN MODELING OF ENTOMOPTER DYNAMICS Paweł Czekałowski*, Krzysztof Sibilski**, Andrzej Żyluk** *Wroclaw University of Technology, **Air Force Institute of Technology

More information

Mechanics of Flight. Warren F. Phillips. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Professor Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Utah State University WILEY

Mechanics of Flight. Warren F. Phillips. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Professor Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Utah State University WILEY Mechanics of Flight Warren F. Phillips Professor Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Utah State University WILEY John Wiley & Sons, Inc. CONTENTS Preface Acknowledgments xi xiii 1. Overview of Aerodynamics

More information

Active Flutter Control using an Adjoint Method

Active Flutter Control using an Adjoint Method 44th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit 9-12 January 26, Reno, Nevada AIAA 26-844 44th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit, Reno, Nevada, 9 12 Jan, 26. Active Flutter Control using an

More information

AEROSPACE ENGINEERING

AEROSPACE ENGINEERING AEROSPACE ENGINEERING Subject Code: AE Course Structure Sections/Units Topics Section A Engineering Mathematics Topics (Core) 1 Linear Algebra 2 Calculus 3 Differential Equations 1 Fourier Series Topics

More information

Wing Kinematics in a Hovering Dronefly Minimize Power Expenditure

Wing Kinematics in a Hovering Dronefly Minimize Power Expenditure Wing Kinematics in a Hovering Dronefly Minimize Power Expenditure Authors: J. H. Wu, and M. Sun Source: Journal of Insect Science, 14(159) : 1-8 Published By: Entomological Society of America URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/jisesa/ieu021

More information

Aeroelastic Analysis Of Membrane Wings

Aeroelastic Analysis Of Membrane Wings Aeroelastic Analysis Of Membrane Wings Soumitra P. Banerjee and Mayuresh J. Patil Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia 46-3 The physics of flapping is very important

More information

Structural Dynamics. Spring mass system. The spring force is given by and F(t) is the driving force. Start by applying Newton s second law (F=ma).

Structural Dynamics. Spring mass system. The spring force is given by and F(t) is the driving force. Start by applying Newton s second law (F=ma). Structural Dynamics Spring mass system. The spring force is given by and F(t) is the driving force. Start by applying Newton s second law (F=ma). We will now look at free vibrations. Considering the free

More information

FLIGHT DYNAMICS. Robert F. Stengel. Princeton University Press Princeton and Oxford

FLIGHT DYNAMICS. Robert F. Stengel. Princeton University Press Princeton and Oxford FLIGHT DYNAMICS Robert F. Stengel Princeton University Press Princeton and Oxford Preface XV Chapter One Introduction 1 1.1 ELEMENTS OF THE AIRPLANE 1 Airframe Components 1 Propulsion Systems 4 1.2 REPRESENTATIVE

More information

/ m U) β - r dr/dt=(n β / C) β+ (N r /C) r [8+8] (c) Effective angle of attack. [4+6+6]

/ m U) β - r dr/dt=(n β / C) β+ (N r /C) r [8+8] (c) Effective angle of attack. [4+6+6] Code No: R05322101 Set No. 1 1. (a) Explain the following terms with examples i. Stability ii. Equilibrium. (b) Comment upon the requirements of stability of a i. Military fighter aircraft ii. Commercial

More information

Limit Cycle Oscillations of a Typical Airfoil in Transonic Flow

Limit Cycle Oscillations of a Typical Airfoil in Transonic Flow Limit Cycle Oscillations of a Typical Airfoil in Transonic Flow Denis B. Kholodar, United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, CO 88 Earl H. Dowell, Jeffrey P. Thomas, and Kenneth C. Hall Duke University,

More information

Introduction to Continuous Systems. Continuous Systems. Strings, Torsional Rods and Beams.

Introduction to Continuous Systems. Continuous Systems. Strings, Torsional Rods and Beams. Outline of Continuous Systems. Introduction to Continuous Systems. Continuous Systems. Strings, Torsional Rods and Beams. Vibrations of Flexible Strings. Torsional Vibration of Rods. Bernoulli-Euler Beams.

More information

Wind Tunnel Experiments of Stall Flutter with Structural Nonlinearity

Wind Tunnel Experiments of Stall Flutter with Structural Nonlinearity Wind Tunnel Experiments of Stall Flutter with Structural Nonlinearity Ahmad Faris R.Razaami School of Aerospace Engineering, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, MALAYSIA Norizham Abdul Razak School of Aerospace

More information

Fig. 1. Bending-Torsion Foil Flutter

Fig. 1. Bending-Torsion Foil Flutter 27 TH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE AERONAUTICAL SCIENCES EXTRACTING POWER IN JET STREAMS: PUSHING THE PERFORMANCE OF FLAPPING WING TECHNOLOGY M.F. Platzer*, M.A. Ashraf**, J. Young**, and J.C.S. Lai**

More information

NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SELF-PROPELLED FLYING OF A THREE-DIMENSIONAL BIRD WITH FLAPPING WINGS

NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SELF-PROPELLED FLYING OF A THREE-DIMENSIONAL BIRD WITH FLAPPING WINGS NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SELF-PROPELLED FLYING OF A THREE-DIMENSIONAL BIRD WITH FLAPPING WINGS WU Chui-Jie, ZHU Lin-Lin State Key Laboratory of Structural Analysis for Industrial Equipment, School of Aeronautics

More information

The Study on Re Effect Correction for Laminar Wing with High Lift

The Study on Re Effect Correction for Laminar Wing with High Lift The Study on Re Effect Correction for Laminar Wing with High Lift Jieke Yao, Wenliang Feng, Lingying Lv and Bin Chen Chengdu Aircraft Industrial (group) CO.LTD, 692, Chengdu, China Abstract. In the past

More information

Two-Dimensional Aerodynamic Models of Insect Flight for Robotic Flapping Wing Mechanisms of Maximum Efficiency

Two-Dimensional Aerodynamic Models of Insect Flight for Robotic Flapping Wing Mechanisms of Maximum Efficiency Journal of Bionic Engineering 5 (2008) 1 11 Two-Dimensional Aerodynamic Models of Insect Flight for Robotic Flapping Wing Mechanisms of Maximum Efficiency Thien-Tong Nguyen 1, Doyoung Byun 2 1. Department

More information

Analysis of a Hinge-Connected Flapping Plate with an Implemented Torsional Spring Model

Analysis of a Hinge-Connected Flapping Plate with an Implemented Torsional Spring Model Analysis of a Hinge-Connected Flapping Plate with an Implemented Torsional Spring Model Zach Gaston 1, Hui Wan 2 and Haibo Dong 3 Department of Mechanical & Materials Engineering, Wright State University,

More information

Unsteady flow over flexible wings at different low Reynolds numbers

Unsteady flow over flexible wings at different low Reynolds numbers EPJ Web of Conferences 114, 02030 (2016) DOI: 10.1051/ epjconf/ 2016114 02030 C Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2016 Unsteady flow over flexible wings at different low Reynolds numbers

More information

Aeroelastic Gust Response

Aeroelastic Gust Response Aeroelastic Gust Response Civil Transport Aircraft - xxx Presented By: Fausto Gill Di Vincenzo 04-06-2012 What is Aeroelasticity? Aeroelasticity studies the effect of aerodynamic loads on flexible structures,

More information

A new computational method for threaded connection stiffness

A new computational method for threaded connection stiffness Research Article A new computational method for threaded connection stiffness Advances in Mechanical Engineering 2016, Vol. 8(12) 1 9 Ó The Author(s) 2016 DOI: 10.1177/1687814016682653 aime.sagepub.com

More information

Vibration Analysis of Flapping Wing Micro Air Vehicle Using Finite Element Methods

Vibration Analysis of Flapping Wing Micro Air Vehicle Using Finite Element Methods June 30 - July 2 2010 London U.K. Vibration Analysis of Flapping Wing Micro Air Vehicle Using Finite Element Methods A. Dr. M Afzaal Malik B. Munzer Shahir Ahmed Qureshi Abstract - This paper illustrates

More information

Computational Fluid Dynamics Study Of Fluid Flow And Aerodynamic Forces On An Airfoil S.Kandwal 1, Dr. S. Singh 2

Computational Fluid Dynamics Study Of Fluid Flow And Aerodynamic Forces On An Airfoil S.Kandwal 1, Dr. S. Singh 2 Computational Fluid Dynamics Study Of Fluid Flow And Aerodynamic Forces On An Airfoil S.Kandwal 1, Dr. S. Singh 2 1 M. Tech Scholar, 2 Associate Professor Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bipin Tripathi

More information

Prediction of Aircraft s Longitudinal Motion Based on Aerodynamic Coefficients and Derivatives by Surrogate Model Approach

Prediction of Aircraft s Longitudinal Motion Based on Aerodynamic Coefficients and Derivatives by Surrogate Model Approach Journal of Mechanics Engineering and Automation 4 (2014) 584-594 D DAVID PUBLISHING Prediction of Aircraft s Longitudinal Motion Based on Aerodynamic Coefficients and Derivatives by Surrogate Model Approach

More information

NUMERICAL SIMULATION AND MODELING OF UNSTEADY FLOW AROUND AN AIRFOIL. (AERODYNAMIC FORM)

NUMERICAL SIMULATION AND MODELING OF UNSTEADY FLOW AROUND AN AIRFOIL. (AERODYNAMIC FORM) Journal of Fundamental and Applied Sciences ISSN 1112-9867 Available online at http://www.jfas.info NUMERICAL SIMULATION AND MODELING OF UNSTEADY FLOW AROUND AN AIRFOIL. (AERODYNAMIC FORM) M. Y. Habib

More information

Aero-Propulsive-Elastic Modeling Using OpenVSP

Aero-Propulsive-Elastic Modeling Using OpenVSP Aero-Propulsive-Elastic Modeling Using OpenVSP August 8, 213 Kevin W. Reynolds Intelligent Systems Division, Code TI NASA Ames Research Center Our Introduction To OpenVSP Overview! Motivation and Background!

More information

Fundamentals of Airplane Flight Mechanics

Fundamentals of Airplane Flight Mechanics David G. Hull Fundamentals of Airplane Flight Mechanics With 125 Figures and 25 Tables y Springer Introduction to Airplane Flight Mechanics 1 1.1 Airframe Anatomy 2 1.2 Engine Anatomy 5 1.3 Equations of

More information

EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF THE DYNAMIC STABILITY DERIVATIVES FOR A FIGHTER MODEL

EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF THE DYNAMIC STABILITY DERIVATIVES FOR A FIGHTER MODEL 24 TH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE AERONAUTICAL SCIENCES EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF THE DYNAMIC STABILITY DERIVATIVES FOR A FIGHTER MODEL MR Soltani*, Ali R Davari** *Associate Professor, **PhD Student

More information

CFD COMPUTATION OF THE GROUND EFFECT ON AIRPLANE WITH HIGH ASPECT RATIO WING

CFD COMPUTATION OF THE GROUND EFFECT ON AIRPLANE WITH HIGH ASPECT RATIO WING 28 TH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE AERONAUTICAL SCIENCES CFD COMPUTATION OF THE GROUND EFFECT ON AIRPLANE WITH HIGH ASPECT RATIO WING Sun Tae Kim*, Youngtae Kim**, Tae Kyu Reu* *Agency for Defense Development,

More information

Unconstrained flight and stability analysis of a flexible rocket using a detailed finite-element based procedure

Unconstrained flight and stability analysis of a flexible rocket using a detailed finite-element based procedure Computational Ballistics II 357 Unconstrained flight and stability analysis of a flexible rocket using a detailed finite-element based procedure D. J. McTavish, D. R. Greatrix & K. Davidson Ryerson University,

More information

COMPUTATIONAL STUDY OF SEPARATION CONTROL MECHANISM WITH THE IMAGINARY BODY FORCE ADDED TO THE FLOWS OVER AN AIRFOIL

COMPUTATIONAL STUDY OF SEPARATION CONTROL MECHANISM WITH THE IMAGINARY BODY FORCE ADDED TO THE FLOWS OVER AN AIRFOIL COMPUTATIONAL STUDY OF SEPARATION CONTROL MECHANISM WITH THE IMAGINARY BODY FORCE ADDED TO THE FLOWS OVER AN AIRFOIL Kengo Asada 1 and Kozo Fujii 2 ABSTRACT The effects of body force distribution on the

More information

APS Flapping flight from flexible wings : tuning of wing stiffness for flight? Tom Daniel, Stacey Combes,, & Sanjay Sane

APS Flapping flight from flexible wings : tuning of wing stiffness for flight? Tom Daniel, Stacey Combes,, & Sanjay Sane APS 2004 Flapping flight from flexible wings : tuning of wing stiffness for flight? Tom Daniel, Stacey Combes,, & Sanjay Sane CNS SENSORY INPUT MOTOR OUTPUT FLIGHT MUSCLES FORCE, STRAIN WING HINGE How

More information

Wind tunnel sectional tests for the identification of flutter derivatives and vortex shedding in long span bridges

Wind tunnel sectional tests for the identification of flutter derivatives and vortex shedding in long span bridges Fluid Structure Interaction VII 51 Wind tunnel sectional tests for the identification of flutter derivatives and vortex shedding in long span bridges J. Á. Jurado, R. Sánchez & S. Hernández School of Civil

More information

Given the water behaves as shown above, which direction will the cylinder rotate?

Given the water behaves as shown above, which direction will the cylinder rotate? water stream fixed but free to rotate Given the water behaves as shown above, which direction will the cylinder rotate? ) Clockwise 2) Counter-clockwise 3) Not enough information F y U 0 U F x V=0 V=0

More information

Masters in Mechanical Engineering. Problems of incompressible viscous flow. 2µ dx y(y h)+ U h y 0 < y < h,

Masters in Mechanical Engineering. Problems of incompressible viscous flow. 2µ dx y(y h)+ U h y 0 < y < h, Masters in Mechanical Engineering Problems of incompressible viscous flow 1. Consider the laminar Couette flow between two infinite flat plates (lower plate (y = 0) with no velocity and top plate (y =

More information

What is flight dynamics? AE540: Flight Dynamics and Control I. What is flight control? Is the study of aircraft motion and its characteristics.

What is flight dynamics? AE540: Flight Dynamics and Control I. What is flight control? Is the study of aircraft motion and its characteristics. KING FAHD UNIVERSITY Department of Aerospace Engineering AE540: Flight Dynamics and Control I Instructor Dr. Ayman Hamdy Kassem What is flight dynamics? Is the study of aircraft motion and its characteristics.

More information

Optimization of Flapping Airfoils for Maximum Thrust and Propulsive Efficiency I. H. Tuncer, M. Kay

Optimization of Flapping Airfoils for Maximum Thrust and Propulsive Efficiency I. H. Tuncer, M. Kay Czech Technical University in Prague Acta Polytechnica Vol. 44 No. 1/2004 Optimization of Flapping Airfoils for Maximum Thrust and Propulsive Efficiency I. H. Tuncer, M. Kay A numerical optimization algorithm

More information

DEPARTMENT OF AEROSPACE ENGINEERING, IIT MADRAS M.Tech. Curriculum

DEPARTMENT OF AEROSPACE ENGINEERING, IIT MADRAS M.Tech. Curriculum DEPARTMENT OF AEROSPACE ENGINEERING, IIT MADRAS M.Tech. Curriculum SEMESTER I AS5010 Engg. Aerodyn. & Flt. Mech. 3 0 0 3 AS5020 Elements of Gas Dyn. & Propln. 3 0 0 3 AS5030 Aircraft and Aerospace Structures

More information

Computational Analysis of Hovering Hummingbird Flight

Computational Analysis of Hovering Hummingbird Flight Computational Analysis of Hovering Hummingbird Flight Zongxian Liang 1 and Haibo Dong 2 Department of Mechanical & Materials Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH 45435 Mingjun Wei 3 Department

More information

AEROELASTIC ANALYSIS OF SPHERICAL SHELLS

AEROELASTIC ANALYSIS OF SPHERICAL SHELLS 11th World Congress on Computational Mechanics (WCCM XI) 5th European Conference on Computational Mechanics (ECCM V) 6th European Conference on Computational Fluid Dynamics (ECFD VI) E. Oñate, J. Oliver

More information

Flight Dynamics and Control

Flight Dynamics and Control Flight Dynamics and Control Lecture 1: Introduction G. Dimitriadis University of Liege Reference material Lecture Notes Flight Dynamics Principles, M.V. Cook, Arnold, 1997 Fundamentals of Airplane Flight

More information

On the Aerodynamic Performance of Dragonfly Wing Section in Gliding Mode

On the Aerodynamic Performance of Dragonfly Wing Section in Gliding Mode Advances in Aerospace Science and Applications. ISSN 2277-3223 Volume 3, Number 3 (2013), pp. 227-234 Research India Publications http://www.ripublication.com/aasa.htm On the Aerodynamic Performance of

More information

CO-ROTATIONAL DYNAMIC FORMULATION FOR 2D BEAMS

CO-ROTATIONAL DYNAMIC FORMULATION FOR 2D BEAMS COMPDYN 011 ECCOMAS Thematic Conference on Computational Methods in Structural Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering M. Papadrakakis, M. Fragiadakis, V. Plevris (eds.) Corfu, Greece, 5-8 May 011 CO-ROTATIONAL

More information

OPTIMIZATION OF TAPERED WING STRUCTURE WITH AEROELASTIC CONSTRAINT

OPTIMIZATION OF TAPERED WING STRUCTURE WITH AEROELASTIC CONSTRAINT ICAS 000 CONGRESS OPTIMIZATION OF TAPERED WING STRUCTURE WITH AEROELASTIC CONSTRAINT Harijono Djojodihardjo, I Wayan Tjatra, Ismojo Harjanto 3 Computational Aeroelastic Group, Aerospace Engineering Department

More information

Structural Dynamics Lecture Eleven: Dynamic Response of MDOF Systems: (Chapter 11) By: H. Ahmadian

Structural Dynamics Lecture Eleven: Dynamic Response of MDOF Systems: (Chapter 11) By: H. Ahmadian Structural Dynamics Lecture Eleven: Dynamic Response of MDOF Systems: (Chapter 11) By: H. Ahmadian ahmadian@iust.ac.ir Dynamic Response of MDOF Systems: Mode-Superposition Method Mode-Superposition Method:

More information

PLEASURE VESSEL VIBRATION AND NOISE FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS

PLEASURE VESSEL VIBRATION AND NOISE FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS PLEASURE VESSEL VIBRATION AND NOISE FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS 1 Macchiavello, Sergio *, 2 Tonelli, Angelo 1 D Appolonia S.p.A., Italy, 2 Rina Services S.p.A., Italy KEYWORDS pleasure vessel, vibration analysis,

More information

Dynamic pitching of an elastic rectangular wing in hovering motion

Dynamic pitching of an elastic rectangular wing in hovering motion Under consideration for publication in J. Fluid Mech. Dynamic pitching of an elastic rectangular wing in hovering motion Hu Dai, Haoxiang Luo, and James F. Doyle 2 Department of Mechanical Engineering,

More information

Modeling of Instantaneous Passive Pitch of Flexible Flapping Wings

Modeling of Instantaneous Passive Pitch of Flexible Flapping Wings Fluid Dynamics and Co-located Conferences June 24-27, 2013, San Diego, CA 43rd Fluid Dynamics Conference AIAA 2013-2469 Modeling of Instantaneous Passive Pitch of Flexible Flapping Wings Chang-kwon Kang

More information

Aerodynamic Investigation of a 2D Wing and Flows in Ground Effect

Aerodynamic Investigation of a 2D Wing and Flows in Ground Effect 26 2 2009 3 CHINESE JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS Vol. 26,No. 2 Mar., 2009 Article ID : 10012246 X(2009) 0220231210 Aerodynamic Investigation of a 2D Wing and Flows in Ground Effect YANG Wei, YANG Zhigang

More information

Some effects of large blade deflections on aeroelastic stability

Some effects of large blade deflections on aeroelastic stability 47th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting Including The New Horizons Forum and Aerospace Exposition 5-8 January 29, Orlando, Florida AIAA 29-839 Some effects of large blade deflections on aeroelastic stability

More information

Mechanics of Inflatable Fabric Beams

Mechanics of Inflatable Fabric Beams Copyright c 2008 ICCES ICCES, vol.5, no.2, pp.93-98 Mechanics of Inflatable Fabric Beams C. Wielgosz 1,J.C.Thomas 1,A.LeVan 1 Summary In this paper we present a summary of the behaviour of inflatable fabric

More information

SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy. A nonlinear POD reduced order model for limit cycle oscillation prediction

SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy. A nonlinear POD reduced order model for limit cycle oscillation prediction SCIENCE CHINA Physics Mechanics & Astronomy Research Paper July 1 Vol.53 No.7: 135 133 doi: 1.17/s11433-1-413- A nonlinear POD reduced order model for limit cycle oscillation prediction CHEN Gang * LI

More information

FREQUENCY DOMAIN FLUTTER ANALYSIS OF AIRCRAFT WING IN SUBSONIC FLOW

FREQUENCY DOMAIN FLUTTER ANALYSIS OF AIRCRAFT WING IN SUBSONIC FLOW FREQUENCY DOMAIN FLUTTER ANALYSIS OF AIRCRAFT WING IN SUBSONIC FLOW Ms.K.Niranjana 1, Mr.A.Daniel Antony 2 1 UG Student, Department of Aerospace Engineering, Karunya University, (India) 2 Assistant professor,

More information

Aerodynamic force analysis in high Reynolds number flows by Lamb vector integration

Aerodynamic force analysis in high Reynolds number flows by Lamb vector integration Aerodynamic force analysis in high Reynolds number flows by Lamb vector integration Claudio Marongiu, Renato Tognaccini 2 CIRA, Italian Center for Aerospace Research, Capua (CE), Italy E-mail: c.marongiu@cira.it

More information

Available online at ScienceDirect. Procedia Engineering 79 (2014 ) 49 54

Available online at  ScienceDirect. Procedia Engineering 79 (2014 ) 49 54 Available online at www.sciencedirect.com ScienceDirect Procedia Engineering 79 (2014 ) 49 54 37th National Conference on Theoretical and Applied Mechanics (37th NCTAM 2013) & The 1st International Conference

More information

Computational Analysis of Hovering Hummingbird Flight

Computational Analysis of Hovering Hummingbird Flight 48th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting Including the New Horizons Forum and Aerospace Exposition 4-7 January 2010, Orlando, Florida AIAA 2010-555 Computational Analysis of Hovering Hummingbird Flight Zongxian

More information

A COUPLED-ADJOINT METHOD FOR HIGH-FIDELITY AERO-STRUCTURAL OPTIMIZATION

A COUPLED-ADJOINT METHOD FOR HIGH-FIDELITY AERO-STRUCTURAL OPTIMIZATION A COUPLED-ADJOINT METHOD FOR HIGH-FIDELITY AERO-STRUCTURAL OPTIMIZATION Joaquim Rafael Rost Ávila Martins Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics Stanford University Ph.D. Oral Examination, Stanford

More information

Aerodynamic Resonance in Transonic Airfoil Flow. J. Nitzsche, R. H. M. Giepman. Institute of Aeroelasticity, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Göttingen

Aerodynamic Resonance in Transonic Airfoil Flow. J. Nitzsche, R. H. M. Giepman. Institute of Aeroelasticity, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Göttingen Aerodynamic Resonance in Transonic Airfoil Flow J. Nitzsche, R. H. M. Giepman Institute of Aeroelasticity, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Göttingen Source: A. Šoda, PhD thesis, 2006 Slide 2/39 Introduction

More information

SIMULATION STUDIES OF MICRO AIR VEHICLE

SIMULATION STUDIES OF MICRO AIR VEHICLE Journal of KONES Powertrain and Transport, Vol. 22, No. 4 2015 SIMULATION STUDIES OF MICRO AIR VEHICLE Krzysztof Sibilski, Andrzej Zyluk, Miroslaw Kowalski Air Force Institute of Technology Ksiecia Boleslawa

More information

NUMERICAL OPTIMIZATION OF THE SHAPE OF A HOLLOW PROJECTILE

NUMERICAL OPTIMIZATION OF THE SHAPE OF A HOLLOW PROJECTILE NUMERICAL OPTIMIZATION OF THE SHAPE OF A HOLLOW PROJECTILE Wessam Mahfouz Elnaggar, Zhihua Chen and Hui Zhang Key Laboratory of Transient Physics, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing,

More information

Jun 22-25, 2009/San Antonio, TX

Jun 22-25, 2009/San Antonio, TX 19th AIAA Computational Fluid Dynamics 22-25 June 2009, San Antonio, Texas AIAA 2009-4273 AIAA 2009 4273 An Assessment of Dual-Time Stepping, Time Spectral and Artificial Compressibility based Numerical

More information

Computational Fluid-Structure Interaction of a Deformable Flapping Wing for Micro Air Vehicle Applications

Computational Fluid-Structure Interaction of a Deformable Flapping Wing for Micro Air Vehicle Applications 46th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit 7-10 January 008, Reno, Nevada AIAA 008-615 Computational Fluid-Structure Interaction of a Deformable Flapping Wing for Micro Air Vehicle Applications Jian

More information

Aeroelastic effects of large blade deflections for wind turbines

Aeroelastic effects of large blade deflections for wind turbines Aeroelastic effects of large blade deflections for wind turbines Torben J. Larsen Anders M. Hansen Risoe, National Laboratory Risoe, National Laboratory P.O. Box 49, 4 Roskilde, Denmark P.O. Box 49, 4

More information

April 15, 2011 Sample Quiz and Exam Questions D. A. Caughey Page 1 of 9

April 15, 2011 Sample Quiz and Exam Questions D. A. Caughey Page 1 of 9 April 15, 2011 Sample Quiz Exam Questions D. A. Caughey Page 1 of 9 These pages include virtually all Quiz, Midterm, Final Examination questions I have used in M&AE 5070 over the years. Note that some

More information

The Dynamics of Passive Wing-Pitching in Hovering Flight of Flapping Micro Air Vehicles Using Three-Dimensional Aerodynamic Simulations

The Dynamics of Passive Wing-Pitching in Hovering Flight of Flapping Micro Air Vehicles Using Three-Dimensional Aerodynamic Simulations AIAA SciTech 4-8 January 216, San Diego, California, USA AIAA Atmospheric Flight Mechanics Conference AIAA 216-13 The Dynamics of Passive Wing-Pitching in Hovering Flight of Flapping Micro Air Vehicles

More information

Structural Dynamics A Graduate Course in Aerospace Engineering

Structural Dynamics A Graduate Course in Aerospace Engineering Structural Dynamics A Graduate Course in Aerospace Engineering By: H. Ahmadian ahmadian@iust.ac.ir The Science and Art of Structural Dynamics What do all the followings have in common? > A sport-utility

More information

Contents. I Introduction 1. Preface. xiii

Contents. I Introduction 1. Preface. xiii Contents Preface xiii I Introduction 1 1 Continuous matter 3 1.1 Molecules................................ 4 1.2 The continuum approximation.................... 6 1.3 Newtonian mechanics.........................

More information

A Harmonic Balance Approach for Large-Scale Problems in Nonlinear Structural Dynamics

A Harmonic Balance Approach for Large-Scale Problems in Nonlinear Structural Dynamics A Harmonic Balance Approach for Large-Scale Problems in Nonlinear Structural Dynamics Allen R, PhD Candidate Peter J Attar, Assistant Professor University of Oklahoma Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering

More information

SPC Aerodynamics Course Assignment Due Date Monday 28 May 2018 at 11:30

SPC Aerodynamics Course Assignment Due Date Monday 28 May 2018 at 11:30 SPC 307 - Aerodynamics Course Assignment Due Date Monday 28 May 2018 at 11:30 1. The maximum velocity at which an aircraft can cruise occurs when the thrust available with the engines operating with the

More information

STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS BASICS:

STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS BASICS: BASICS: STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS Real-life structures are subjected to loads which vary with time Except self weight of the structure, all other loads vary with time In many cases, this variation of the load

More information

Flight Dynamics, Simulation, and Control

Flight Dynamics, Simulation, and Control Flight Dynamics, Simulation, and Control For Rigid and Flexible Aircraft Ranjan Vepa CRC Press Taylor & Francis Group Boca Raton London New York CRC Press is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an

More information

PROGRESS IN THE PREDICTION OF AEROSERVOELASTIC INSTABILITIES ON LARGE CIVIL TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT

PROGRESS IN THE PREDICTION OF AEROSERVOELASTIC INSTABILITIES ON LARGE CIVIL TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT ICAS 2000 CONGRESS PROGRESS IN THE PREDICTION OF AEROSERVOELASTIC INSTABILITIES ON LARGE CIVIL TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT M.LACABANNE, A.LAPORTE AEROSPATIALE MATRA AIRBUS, 31060 Toulouse Cedex 03, France Abstract

More information

Lift Enhancement by Dynamically Changing Wingspan. in Forward Flapping Flight (09/10/2013)

Lift Enhancement by Dynamically Changing Wingspan. in Forward Flapping Flight (09/10/2013) Lift Enhancement by Dynamically Changing Wingspan in Forward Flapping Flight Shizhao Wang 1, Xing Zhang 1, Guowei He 1a), ianshu Liu 2,1 (09/10/2013) 1 he State Key Laboratory of Nonlinear Mechanics, Institute

More information

Lecture 7 Boundary Layer

Lecture 7 Boundary Layer SPC 307 Introduction to Aerodynamics Lecture 7 Boundary Layer April 9, 2017 Sep. 18, 2016 1 Character of the steady, viscous flow past a flat plate parallel to the upstream velocity Inertia force = ma

More information

VIBRATION PROBLEMS IN ENGINEERING

VIBRATION PROBLEMS IN ENGINEERING VIBRATION PROBLEMS IN ENGINEERING FIFTH EDITION W. WEAVER, JR. Professor Emeritus of Structural Engineering The Late S. P. TIMOSHENKO Professor Emeritus of Engineering Mechanics The Late D. H. YOUNG Professor

More information

A HARMONIC BALANCE APPROACH FOR MODELING THREE-DIMENSIONAL NONLINEAR UNSTEADY AERODYNAMICS AND AEROELASTICITY

A HARMONIC BALANCE APPROACH FOR MODELING THREE-DIMENSIONAL NONLINEAR UNSTEADY AERODYNAMICS AND AEROELASTICITY ' - ' Proceedings of ASME International Mechanical Engineering Conference and Exposition November 17-22, 22, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA IMECE-22-3232 A HARMONIC ALANCE APPROACH FOR MODELING THREE-DIMENSIONAL

More information

Flow-Induced Vibration Analysis of Supported Pipes with a Crack

Flow-Induced Vibration Analysis of Supported Pipes with a Crack Flow-Induced Vibration Analysis of Supported Pipes with a Crack Jin-Hyuk Lee 1 *, Samer Masoud Al-Said,3 1 Department of Mechanical Engineering, American University of Sharjah, Sharjah, UAE, Department

More information

Dynamic Responses of Composite Marine Propeller in Spatially Wake

Dynamic Responses of Composite Marine Propeller in Spatially Wake Dynamic Responses of Composite Marine Propeller in Spatially Wake Dynamic Responses of Composite Marine Propeller in Spatially Wake Y. Hong a, X.D. He a,*, R.G. Wang a, Y.B. Li a, J.Z. Zhang a, H.M. Zhang

More information

Natural frequency analysis of fluid-conveying pipes in the ADINA system

Natural frequency analysis of fluid-conveying pipes in the ADINA system Journal of Physics: Conference Series OPEN ACCESS Natural frequency analysis of fluid-conveying pipes in the ADINA system To cite this article: L Wang et al 2013 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 448 012014 View the

More information

Maximizing the natural frequency of a beam with an intermediate elastic support

Maximizing the natural frequency of a beam with an intermediate elastic support Journal of Sound and Vibration 91 (006) 19 138 JOURNAL OF SOUND AND VIBRATION www.elsevier.com/locate/jsvi Short Communication Maximizing the natural frequency of a beam with an intermediate elastic support

More information

Chapter 4 The Equations of Motion

Chapter 4 The Equations of Motion Chapter 4 The Equations of Motion Flight Mechanics and Control AEM 4303 Bérénice Mettler University of Minnesota Feb. 20-27, 2013 (v. 2/26/13) Bérénice Mettler (University of Minnesota) Chapter 4 The Equations

More information

Shape Optimization of Revolute Single Link Flexible Robotic Manipulator for Vibration Suppression

Shape Optimization of Revolute Single Link Flexible Robotic Manipulator for Vibration Suppression 15 th National Conference on Machines and Mechanisms NaCoMM011-157 Shape Optimization of Revolute Single Link Flexible Robotic Manipulator for Vibration Suppression Sachindra Mahto Abstract In this work,

More information

German Aerospace Center (DLR)

German Aerospace Center (DLR) German Aerospace Center (DLR) AEROGUST M30 Progress Meeting 23-24 November 2017, Bordeaux Presented by P. Bekemeryer / J. Nitzsche With contributions of C. Kaiser 1, S. Görtz 2, R. Heinrich 2, J. Nitzsche

More information

Lecture AC-1. Aircraft Dynamics. Copy right 2003 by Jon at h an H ow

Lecture AC-1. Aircraft Dynamics. Copy right 2003 by Jon at h an H ow Lecture AC-1 Aircraft Dynamics Copy right 23 by Jon at h an H ow 1 Spring 23 16.61 AC 1 2 Aircraft Dynamics First note that it is possible to develop a very good approximation of a key motion of an aircraft

More information

Structural Dynamics Lecture 4. Outline of Lecture 4. Multi-Degree-of-Freedom Systems. Formulation of Equations of Motions. Undamped Eigenvibrations.

Structural Dynamics Lecture 4. Outline of Lecture 4. Multi-Degree-of-Freedom Systems. Formulation of Equations of Motions. Undamped Eigenvibrations. Outline of Multi-Degree-of-Freedom Systems Formulation of Equations of Motions. Newton s 2 nd Law Applied to Free Masses. D Alembert s Principle. Basic Equations of Motion for Forced Vibrations of Linear

More information