Dot Physics: The Crazy Science of Drone Flight
Released on 01/23/2018
Drones.
They're everywhere now.
And maybe somewhat annoying.
I bet you didn't know how a quadcopter works.
First let's start off with a hovering drone.
Two rotors rotate clockwise
and two counterclockwise.
By rotating in opposite directions,
this makes a total anchored momentum zero
so that the drone as a whole will stay stationary.
To hover, all motors push up the same amount.
Now, what if you wanna accelerate the drone forward?
In this case you need to tilt the drone forward
so that there is a component of thrust pushing forward.
To do this, decrease the thrust in the front two motors
while increasing the thrust in the back two.
Voila, forward momentum.
Do something similar to accelerate back or sideways.
But how do you turn?
This is the fun part.
It has to do with the conservation of angular momentum,
which is the measure of the object's rotational motion.
If I decrease the rotation of the two clockwise motors,
the drone would have to rotate clockwise
in order to keep the total angular momentum at zero.
Actually, I need to also increase the rotation
of the counterclockwise motors
to keep the drone from falling.
But technically it's not just angular momentum,
there's also a drag torque on the props.
Where torque is like a rotational force
that changes the angular momentum.
In the end,
a drone can be controlled by just varying the speed
in these four motors.
No complicated mechanical parts,
but of course it's still complicated enough
that you need a computer to translate
your control inputs into manipulations of their motors.
So, that's the physics of how to annoy someone
with a flying machine.
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