ROJan 10, 2022

Multiaxis nose-pointing-and-shooting in a biomimetic morphing-wing aircraft

arXiv:2201.03601v15 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for advanced air combat capabilities in unmanned aerial vehicles, though it is incremental as it extends known concepts to biomimetic designs.

The paper tackled the problem of enabling biomimetic morphing-wing UAVs to achieve supermaneuverability, specifically multiaxis nose-pointing-and-shooting maneuvers, and demonstrated this capability through simulation with low morphing complexity.

Modern high-performance combat aircraft exceed conventional flight-envelope limits on maneuverability through the use of thrust vectoring, and so achieve supermaneuverability. With ongoing development of biomimetic unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), the potential for supermaneuverability through biomimetic mechanisms becomes apparent. So far, this potential has not been well studied: biomimetic UAVs have not yet been shown to be capable of any of the forms of classical supermaneuverability available to thrust-vectored aircraft. Here we show this capability, by demonstrating how biomimetic morphing-wing UAVs can perform sophisticated multiaxis nose-pointing-and-shooting (NPAS) maneuvers at low morphing complexity. Nonlinear flight-dynamic analysis is used to characterize the extent and stability of the multidimensional space of aircraft trim states that arises from biomimetic morphing. Navigating this trim space provides an effective model-based guidance strategy for generating open-loop NPAS maneuvers in simulation. Our results demonstrate the capability of biomimetic aircraft for air combat-relevant supermaneuverability, and provide strategies for the exploration, characterization, and guidance of further forms of classical and non-classical supermaneuverability in such aircraft.

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