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Bat Planner: Aggressive Flying Ball Player

IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters, 2023
In this letter, an aggressive quadrotor ball playing system called Bat is proposed, whose goal is to intercept a flying ball and volley it towards a designated target. Aggressive means Bat operates the quadrotor aggressively to intercept balls that are far away and hit them to distant positions in ways that are beyond the reach of existing methods. The
Huan Yu   +7 more
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Bats Flying at High Altitudes

2021
At the second North American Symposium on Bat Research the first reported use of radar to study flight behavior in bats confirmed that Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis mexicana) fly at altitudes over 3000 m above the ground. The reasons for these high-altitude flights were unclear, and it was assumed that the bats flew this high to ...
Gary F. McCracken   +4 more
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‘No cost of echolocation for flying bats’ revisited

Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 2012
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Echolocation is energetically costly for resting bats, but previous experiments suggested echolocation to come at no costs for flying bats. Yet, previous studies did not investigate the relationship between echolocation, flight speed, aerial manoeuvres and metabolism.
Voigt, C., Lewanzik, D.
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Flying through the Standards with: Bats

Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2003
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) No abstract provided.
Krantz, Patrick D., Barrow, Lloyd H.
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How bats detect flying insects

Physics Today, 1980
In the process of evolution every possible niche for survival has been exploited by some animal species. Whenever there is a biological area that produces a surplus it becomes advantageous for some species to adapt itself to make use of that surplus; many species have thus become endowed with highly specialized skills that have given them exclusive ...
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Insectivora, flying lemurs and bats

1977
Although John Ray in the 17th Century with great foresight used toes and teeth as the basis for mammalian classification, he failed to recognise the Insectivora as a natural group. This was evidently due to the fact that the form of their toes and teeth, with some exceptions such as the limbs of moles, are generalised and do not show the special ...
J. E. Webb, J. A. Wallwork, J. H. Elgood
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Biochemical correlates of flying behaviour in bats

Australian Journal of Zoology, 1978
The activities of glycolytic and Krebs cycle enzymes, and the distribution and functional properties of lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes, were determined in pectoral muscles from a range of bats that differ in flying behaviour. Correlations were found between flying patterns, and the degree to which the pectoral muscle depended upon anaerobic ...
BD Muller, J Baldwin
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Conservation Status of Flying Mammal: Bats

2013
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Bats belong to order Chiroptera of class Mammalia and are the only mammals that are capable of true flight. There are over 4,000 mammalian species in the world and almost one in four of them is a bat. At present, there are approximately 1001 species of bats that are subcategorized as Megachiroptera (1 ...
Kumar, Jitendra, Kanaujia, Amita
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The echolocation of flying insects by bats

Animal Behaviour, 1960
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) No abstract provided.
Griffin, Donald R.   +2 more
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