The Daily Telegraph

Ladybird wings could lead to better umbrellas

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

LADYBIRDS could hold the key to building an umbrella that does not blow inside out on a windy day, scientists believe.

The beetle manages to pack its wings away in complex origami-like folds beneath its carapace, before opening them into a fixed, strong membrane in flight.

Until now, the folding mechanism has remained a mystery because nobody could see beneath the outer spotty forewings, known as elytra.

But scientists in Japan created a see-through forewing out of transparen­t resin and transplant­ed it onto a ladybird to provide a literal window into the process, using high speed cameras and CT scans to observe. They say it will help explain how the elastic wings can maintain their strength and rigidity in flight, a finding that could improve the design of umbrellas, satellites and microscopi­c medical instrument­s.

“I believe that beetle wing folding has the potential to change the umbrella design that has been basically unchanged for more than 1,000 years,” said Assistant Professor Kazuya Saito of the University of Tokyo’s Institute of Industrial Science.

“Usually, transforma­ble structures require a lot of parts, including joints and rigid parts, but ladybugs effectivel­y use flexibilit­y and elastic behaviour in the structures and achieve complex transforma­tion by very simple structures.

“The ladybug umbrella will be made by seamless flexible frames, therefore indestruct­ible even in strong wind, and able to be deployed very quickly by using stored elastic energy.”

Ladybirds are highly mobile insects that can switch between walking and flying with ease and speed because they can quickly deploy and collapse their wings.

 ??  ?? A ladybird begins the origamilik­e folding of its wings
A ladybird begins the origamilik­e folding of its wings

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom