Why Birds Fly In A V-Formation
Markus Unsöld
The theory that birds fly in a V-formation to save energy is not new. But this is the first time scientists have recorded data from birds flying in the wild, thanks to new technology.
British scientists attached sensors to 14 northern bald ibises to track their movements during a 43-minute migratory flight.
When a bird flaps its wings, it creates lift by generating a looping motion of air around the wing.
The airflow blowing over the top of the wing is thrown downward, known as downwash (shown in red in the graphic below), while the air at the wing's tips is accelerated upwards, known as upwash (shown in blue).
Nature News
Researchers from the Royal Veterinary College in London found that birds not only position themselves in the best possible spots to take advantage of the upward flow of air, they are also paying attention to the timing of the flap movements of the bird ahead, "which create tip vortices that undulate up and down," Florian Muijres and Michael Dickinson wrote in a News & Views commentary on the study, also published in Nature.
A bird will alter the timing of its wing beat to stay in the upwash created by the moving wingtips of the bird ahead of it.
"A bird that is following another bird must carefully adjust its own flapping motion, not in perfect temporal synchrony with the leader, but rather at a precise phase lag that tracks the tip as it oscillates," Muijres and Dickinson write.
To do all those things, the best way for the birds to fly is in a V- shape.
Check out the video below for more on why birds fly in a V-formation.
- 5 things to avoid doing if your phone gets wet
- Intense rains quench Uttarakhand’s wildfire frenzy; Supreme Court tells state govt. to stop relying on rain god
- IPL decoded: Can RCB still qualify? Probabilities of IPL teams qualifying for the playoffs
- IPL decoded: Hasty 100s - The fastest centuries in IPL 2024 so far
- 5 pasta types for home cooking enthusiasts