For the majority of the 21st century, the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) has been designing mini-robotic aircraft to mimic characteristics of insects and birds. Using biomimetics, engineers have created synthetic systems to function and achieve insect-like maneuverability. For the engineers, however, challenges are inherent when manipulating manmade mechanisms to perform instinctive movements of flying insects and birds. One such challenge is designing an aircraft capable of six-degrees-of-freedom flight with only two actuators. According to patents filed by David Doman, Michael Oppenheimer, Isaac Weintraub, and David Sigthorsson, this challenge may have met its match.
These patents and its resulting invention have now landed on the doorstep of a small business in Los Angeles, Airion Health, LLC. In January, the Department of the Air Force signed a Non-Exclusive Patent License Agreement…