technical paper
Wing design consideration of feathered dinosaur Anchiornis huxley using GA and aerodynamic performance analysis tool XFLR5
keywords:
xflr5
wing design
anchiornis huxley
feathered dinosaur
ga
Anchiornis huxley is a paravian dinosaur that lived in China about 160 million years ago. Their fossils indicate they had wings not only on their forelimbs but also on their hindlimbs. Therefore, they are thought to have glided with both fore and hindlimbs in tandem, which is different from the way the contemporary birds fly. The details of how they used fore and hindlimbs while flying are not clarified yet because the fossil cannot provide the direct information of how they flew during the time they lived. This study tried to give insights into this missing information by using an optimization technique. Genetic algorithm (GA) was used for the optimization of wing configuration parameters and the aerodynamic performance analysis tool XFLR5 was used for the evaluation of aerodynamic performance of individuals. These two tools were used in combination to calculate the optimal wing configuration of individuals under the given condition. As a result, the tandem wing configuration was found to be optimum when the fore wing had weak performance compared to the hind wing. In contrast, the single wing or only fore wing configuration was found to be optimum when the fore wing had the same or better performance than the hind wing. This result indicates how the wing configuration evolved from its original ancestral two-winged or tandem wing configuration to the single-winged one of the contemporary birds as the fore wing improved its aerodynamic performance.