Called BeeRotor, it adjusts its speed and avoids obstacles thanks to optic flow sensors inspired by insect vision.
It can fly along a tunnel with uneven, moving walls without measuring either speed or altitude.
All aircraft are currently equipped with an inertial measurement unit, including accelerometers.
This allows these aircraft to stabilise their roll and pitch with respect to the horizon or rather with respect to its perpendicular: the direction of the centre of the Earth.
An accelerometer measures all the accelerations of the aircraft including gravity, which is always directed towards the centre of the Earth.
Researchers at the Institut des Sciences du Mouvement - Etienne-Jules Marey took inspiration from winged insects to create BeeRotor, a tethered flying robot able for the first time to adjust its speed and follow terrain with no accelerometer and without measuring speed or altitude.
With a weight of 80 grams and a length of 47 centimetres, it can, all by itself, avoid vertical obstacles in a tunnel with moving walls.
To achieve this, the researchers mimicked the ability of insects to use the passing landscape as they fly.
To measure optic flow, BeeRotor is equipped with a mere 24 photodiodes (or pixels) distributed at the top and the bottom of its eye.
This enables it to detect contrasts in the environment as well as their motion. As in insects, the speed at which a feature in the scenery moves from one pixel to another provides the angular velocity of the flow.
By way of a brain, BeeRotor has three feedback loops, which act as three different reflexes that directly make use of the optic flow.
The first feedback loop makes it change its altitude so as to follow the floor or the roof. The second one controls the robot's speed in order to adapt it to the size of the tunnel through which it flies.
The third loop stabilises the eye in relation to the local slope, using a dedicated motor. This enables the robot to always obtain the best possible field of view, independently of its degree of pitch.
