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Fancy flying from advanced aeronautics:

the design of swifts and jet fighters

by

Bird aerobatics have fascinated bird-watchers since the beginning. And bird design has inspired the designers of flying machines for over a century.1 Yet still there are new discoveries about their intricate engineering, suggesting that we still have much to learn.

Origin of bird flight

God revealed that He created flying creatures on Day 5 of Creation Week, the day before He created land creatures and man.

Photo by A.Wilson,USGSswifts

However, progressive creationists deny this and believe that land reptiles came before birds, and evolutionists believe that birds evolved from reptiles.2

Evolution-promoters seem not to understand how flight works, and how it needs so many things arranged in the right order. For example, the Skeptic-dominated Australian Museum claimed that some dinosaurs evolved a certain bone that ‘also allowed them to move their hands in a broad fan-shaped motion and to snap their long arms and grasping fingers forward to grab fleeing prey. This powerful, flapping motion has today become an important part of the flight stroke in modern birds.’3

However, this would be just the wrong sort of motion for flight. A flap in the forward direction would have the effect of pushing the bird backwards, according to Newton’s 3rd Law (every action produces an equal and opposite reaction). In a bird’s flap for powered flight, the primary flight feathers are angled in such a way that they force air backwards so the bird is propelled forwards. And the wings have an aerofoil shape like an airplane’s wings, angled to deflect air downwards. This produces lift, again by the reaction.4

Skeptics also ignore the amazing feather. The feather is an aerodynamic marvel that’s strong and lightweight, and completely different from a reptile scale.5,6 But feathers are not the sorts of structures that would be useful on limbs that flap at a prey animal, since they would be damaged by the pounding.

Finally, the purpose of the wings is to force air backwards and downwards so the bird is propelled forwards and kept aloft. So wings should form a wide surface that has high air resistance, so it can move large volumes of air. But for limbs designed to grab forward at prey, it’s an advantage to have a surface that has low air resistance, i.e. lets air through easily. Think of the holes in a fly swat, or streamlined shapes designed to move through the air as opposed to moving the air itself. Also, the rush of air from the proto-wing would warn the prey of its impending doom!

Exquisite eddies

A recent study on swifts7,8 shows that there is even more to flight than downward deflection of air. They also make use of a leading-edge vortex (LEV) to generate even more lift, so that ‘the current understanding of how birds fly must be revised.’7

jet - swifts

The bird wing actually has two parts: the inner ‘arm wing’ and an outer ‘hand wing’. The arm wing deflects air downwards just like an airplane wing, according to the lead researcher, John Videler of the Leiden and Groningen universities in the Netherlands.9 But analysis of the fluid10 flow showed that the sharp leading edge of the hand wing easily formed the ‘mini-tornados’ that helped suck the bird upwards. These form at a wide range of wing angles, so the bird wing is far less likely to stall (suddenly lose lift) than an aircraft wing.11

Swifts have scythe-shaped wings, each comprising a relatively small arm wing and a very long hand wing that generates a powerful LEV. So swifts can sweep their wings back for fast flight, but can ‘turn on a dime’8 by reducing the wing sweep (straightening the wings). It enables them to catch insects in flight (in their beaks!). And perching birds need LEVs to produce high lift at low speeds, otherwise they could not land on a branch.

The importance of LEVs has already been noted in insect12 and vulture13 flight. And aerospace engineers have also exploited their superb lift when it comes to landing supersonic jets safely. Their small, swept-back wings make fast flight possible, but without the LEVs, their small wings would not produce enough lift when they slow down to land.

Designing wings

The commentators spoiled their report of this research with the usual fact-free homage to evolution:

‘To maximize flight speed as well as maneuverability, evolution and aeronautic engineering converged on the same solution—variable wing sweep. Swifts and the Tomcat jet fighter keep their wings swept back to reach high speeds. To execute tight turns, both flyers reduce their wing sweep.’8
swift dino bird

Not so easy

Many evolutionists propose that dinosaurs turned into birds. Supposedly, some dinosaurs began flapping their arms and developed feathers. Eventually, powered flight evolved. However, this would require many coordinated mutations to produce the masses of new information required. And dino-bird intermediates exist only as imaginary models (above)—not as fossils.

However, since we know that the jet fighter has been intelligently designed, then why not the swift as well, since good science works by analogy? Furthermore, the authors point out:

‘The gliding flight of storks inspired the first airplane designs of Otto Lilienthal in the late 19th century. The benevolent flight characteristics of these slow and stately gliders invested airplane pioneers with the confidence to take to the skies.’

The article concluded:

‘In the future, the swift’s flight control might inspire a new generation of engineers to develop morphing microrobotic vehicles that can fly with the agility, efficiency, and short take-off and landing capabilities of insects and birds.’8

Swifts navigate in their sleep!

Swifts often fly at great heights at night—3,000 m (10,000 feet), in fact as high as small private planes—yet swifts are capable of more sophisticated feats of navigation than these. And they do it while sleeping (a swift shuts down half its brain at a time).

Dr Johan Bäckman, an expert in bird migration at Lund University in Sweden, studied over 200 swifts by radar. He found that they kept on course by an unexpected method. Rather than using landmarks on the ground, they judged their direction by the wind,14 so they would not be blown off course. Dr Bäckman said:

‘We found that swifts have an extraordinary ability to perform orientations in relation to wind. Even the most advanced planes, with good navigational instruments, would probably be unable to judge the wind drift like this. The remarkable thing is that they do all this while flying through the night and sleeping on the wing at these very high altitudes.’15

The superior flight control and navigation is just what we would expect from the biblical picture—birds were made by a Designer whose brilliance surpasses our understanding.

Published: 17 December 2007

References and notes

  1. See McIntosh, A., 100 years of airplanes—but these weren’t the first flying machines! Creation 26(1):44–48, 2003; creation.com/airplanes. Return to Text.
  2. See also Q&A: Did birds really evolve from dinosaurs?; creation.com/dinosaurs#birds. Return to Text.
  3. Sarfati, J., Skeptics/Australian Museum ‘Feathered Dinosaur’ display: Knockdown argument against creation? creation.com/dinodisplay, 26 November 2002. Return to Text.
  4. Many explanations of bird and airplane flight involve the Bernoulli Effect, in which faster flow of a fluid decreases the pressure. So the faster airflow on top means that the greater pressure on the bottom of the wing produces lift. However this is a secondary rather than the primary reason for lift. More recent studies emphasize Newton’s 3rd Law. Once there is a turning in the flow, then there will be a force on the object doing it. There are two reasons that forward motion causes the wings to deflect air downwards: first, the wings are slanted slightly upwards into the air stream (a positive ‘angle of attack’); second, the Coandă Effect, where a fluid follows the curve of the surface, which from the upper surface points downwards. See Anderson, D. and Eberhardt, S., Understanding Flight, McGraw–Hill, 2001; home.comcast.net. Prof. Andy McIntosh (see Related resource, above) teaches his students that fundamentally lift is due to circulation (technical term for the turning of the flow), which will generate lift by reaction. The flow leaves the trailing edge of a real wing smoothly (the Kutta condition) which invokes circulation. Lift is given by l = ρvg, where l = lift per unit of wingspan, ρ = density, v = velocity, g = circulation strength (the Kutta–Zhukovsky theorem). Return to Text.
  5. See Sarfati, J.D., Refuting Evolution, ch. 4, Creation Ministries International, Brisbane, Australia, 1999–2004. Return to Text.
  6. Matthews, M., Scientific American admits creationists hit a sore spot: Need for a ‘new paradigm’ in bird evolution; creation.com/sciamsore, 13 March 2003. Return to Text.
  7. Videler, J.J., Stamhuis, E.J. and Povel, G.D.E., Leading-edge vortex lifts swifts, Science 306(5703):1960–1962, 10 December 2004. Return to Text.
  8. Müller, U.K. and Lentink, D., Turning on a dime, Science 306(5703):1899–1900, 10 December 2004 (comment on ref. 7). Return to Text.
  9. Cited in Britt, R.R., Secret of Bird Flight Revealed (Hint: Think Fighter Jets), Live Science, livescience.com, 9 December 2004. Return to Text.
  10. A fluid is a liquid or a gas. It doesn’t matter what fluid is used, as long as a ratio of velocity and viscosity called the Reynold’s Number is constant. This number is a ratio of inertial to viscous forces named after the British engineer Osborne Reynolds (1842–1912), given by Re = ρvl/μ, where ρ is density, v is mean velocity, l is a characteristic length and μ is viscosity. These researchers used a 1.5-times-enlarged scale model in a water tunnel, which was easier to analyze than using a wind tunnel. Return to Text.
  11. As a pilot reduces an aircraft’s speed, the angle of the wing to the air has to increase to maintain lift (the pilot pulls back on the stick or control column). But there comes a point where the smooth flow of air over the wing’s top surface suddenly fails and so the wing loses all its lift. The nose of the aircraft suddenly pitches down, causing an accident if it happens near the ground. Return to Text.
  12. Insects—defying the laws of aerodynamics? Creation 20(2):31, 1998; Brookes, M., On a wing and a vortex, New Scientist 156(2103):24–27, 11 October 1997. Return to Text.
  13. Vulture vortex victory, Creation 21(3):8, 1999; Flying, January 1999, p. 109. Return to Text.
  14. Bäckman, J. and Alerstam, T., Harmonic oscillatory orientation relative to the wind in nocturnal roosting flights of the swift Apus apus, Journal of Experimental Biology 205:905–910, 2002. Return to Text.
  15. Cited in Day, E., Revealed: how the swift keeps to its course at 10,000 feet—even as it sleeps: New research reveals navigational skills of the bird that outperforms the most advanced aircraft, Sunday Telegraph, p. 11, 14 March 2004. Return to Text.