AI Article Synopsis

  • Muscles and insect movement involve elastic and dissipative elements crucial for energy efficiency and control during flight.
  • An insect's exoskeleton can act as a spring, reducing power needs during flapping, but its behavior in complex, non-sinusoidal movements remains unclear.
  • Testing showed that thoraces maintained consistent power savings and mechanical properties across various deformation patterns, indicating that frequency-independent damping could simplify motor control by removing velocity-related filtering effects.

Article Abstract

Muscles act through elastic and dissipative elements to mediate movement, which can introduce dissipation and filtering which are important for energetics and control. The high power requirements of flapping flight can be reduced by an insect's exoskeleton, which acts as a spring with frequency-independent material properties under purely sinusoidal deformation. However, this purely sinusoidal dynamic regime does not encompass the asymmetric wing strokes of many insects or non-periodic deformations induced by external perturbations. As such, it remains unknown whether a frequency-independent model applies broadly and what implications it has for control. We used a vibration testing system to measure the mechanical properties of isolated thoraces under symmetric, asymmetric and band-limited white noise deformations. The asymmetric and white noise conditions represent two types of generalized, multi-frequency deformations that may be encountered during steady-state and perturbed flight. Power savings and dissipation were indistinguishable between symmetric and asymmetric conditions, demonstrating that no additional energy is required to deform the thorax non-sinusoidally. Under white noise conditions, stiffness and damping were invariant with frequency, suggesting that the thorax has no frequency-dependent filtering properties. A simple flat frequency response function fits our measured frequency response. This work demonstrates the potential of materials with frequency-independent damping to simplify motor control by eliminating any velocity-dependent filtering that viscoelastic elements usually impose between muscle and wing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10189308PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2023.0141DOI Listing

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