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8 Insect Drones That Might Soon Be Buzzing Overhead

 & Chandra Steele Senior Features Writer

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8 Insect Drones That Might Soon Be Buzzing Overhead
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The insect drones are coming, but will you even be able to spot them?

The word drone has never had a particularly positive connotation. Whether it’s being used to describe a boring, unending monotone or a weaponized harbinger of death, a drone is something to escape. Which is perhaps why some commercial drone makers instead market their gadgets as quadcopters.

Soon, however, these devices might fly by unnoticed. That's because some of them are being shrunk down to the size of insects, meaning they could become just as pervasive and just as insidious. While no government agency has admitted to deploying insect drones, they have reportedly been in the works for years. DARPA, as it often does, says many of these insect drones are for "disaster relief."

Whatever their ultimate purpose, these insect drones involve impressive feats of engineering. Check out the gallery to see how these tiny (and possibly lethal) drones mimic the vision, body, wing performance, landing, and behavior of their non-weaponized insect counterparts.

Vision

A drone has to "see" where it's going. And if it's going to replicate insect features, it had better employ one of an insect's best adaptations: the compound eye. A team from the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne has developed CURVACE (Curved Artificial Compound Eyes). It comprises a microlens array, a neuromorphic photodetector array, and a flexible printed circuit board that are cut, arranged, and curved in an attempt to recreate the fast motion perception of bug vision.

Body

One challenge in keeping drones airborne is bad weather and windy conditions. The team at the Tactical Robots division of Physical Sciences, Inc. (PSI) "embraced the lessons of nature" in developing the Instant Eye, a small and nimble device that can zip through tree brush and power lines and be in the sky within seconds. “Through the study of insects such as the Hawk Moth, PSI was able to create what was, at the time, the smallest, fastest reacting UAV autopilot and a family of small flying robots that displayed flight performance only seen in nature." That led to the Instant Eye (above) and the newer, folding arm version.

Wings

An insect-sized robot from the Harvard Microbiotics Laboratory can flap its wings and get around in a way that roughly mimics the passive wing pitching reversal that allows flying bugs to hover.

Landing Gear

This DARPA development isn't small-scale but it's insect-inspired. A helicopter landing can be rocky. To smooth things out, DARPA's Mission Adaptive Rotor program created landing gear that mimicked the articulated, jointed legs of insects and placed contact sensors at their "feet." The equipment was put on a drone and DARPA found the combination kept the body of the helicopter stable when it landed on surfaces that slope 20 degrees, which is over twice the capabilities of current machines. While the gear is meant for helicopters, the advancement could help insect-sized drones.

Programming

An inherent part of an insect's success is its instinct. DARPA's Fast Lightweight Autonomy program is looking for software solutions to help tiny drones maneuver adeptly and quickly through dense or tight areas. DARPA used a video of a Goshawk's flight to show the reaction times and capabilities it wants its drones to have.

Swarms

Insects do go it alone sometimes but to be extra effective, they can carry out a task in a swarm. The GRASP (General Robotics, Automation, Sensing, and Perception) Laboratory at the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania put this to the test for a paper that said "smaller quadrotors exhibit higher accelerations, allowing more rapid adaptation to disturbances and higher stability."

Selfies

Naturally, the most important question to ask about an insect drone is, does it take selfies? The palm-sized Nano Selfie Drone from Zano can be controlled by an app and snap overhead photos. It was on display at CES after earning about $3.5 million on Kickstarter. You can pre-order it for about $300, but shipments are slow-going.

Nixie

Oddly, there's more than one selfie drone, and the wearable Nixie nabbed the $500,000 grand prize at Intel's inaugural Make It Wearable competition last year. From the minds of Christoph Kohstall, Jelena Jovanovic, and Michael Niedermayr, the device was envisioned as a flying pair of glasses, but developed into a wristband that unfolds into a remote-controlled quadcopter. It's not yet on sale, but you can sign up to be notified when it is.

About Our Expert

Chandra Steele

Chandra Steele

Senior Features Writer

My Experience

My title is Senior Features Writer, which is a license to write about absolutely anything if I can connect it to technology (I can). I’ve been at PCMag since 2011 and have covered the surveillance state, vaccination cards, ghost guns, voting, ISIS, art, fashion, film, design, gender bias, and more. You might have seen me on TV talking about these topics or heard me on your commute home on the radio or a podcast. Or maybe you’ve just seen my Bernie meme

I strive to explain topics that you might come across in the news but not fully understand, such as NFTs and meme stocks. I’ve had the pleasure of talking tech with Jeff Goldblum, Ang Lee, and other celebrities who have brought a different perspective to it. I put great care into writing gift guides and am always touched by the notes I get from people who’ve used them to choose presents that have been well-received. Though I love that I get to write about the tech industry every day, it’s touched by gender, racial, and socioeconomic inequality and I try to bring these topics to light. 

Outside of PCMag, I write fiction, poetry, humor, and essays on culture.

My Areas of Expertise

  • Making incomprehensible tech news easy to understand
  • Expanding the boundaries of topics covered in the industry
  • Figuring out tips and tricks in apps and on devices and letting you know about them
  • Putting together gift guides for everyone in your life 

The Technology I Use

All that gadgets is gold for me: my iPhone 11 Pro, my fifth-generation iPad that I use only for streaming videos and music, my iPad mini 4 that I like to take with me whenever I carry a bag that can fit it, and my MacBook Pro. Why are they all different shades of gold, though? What’s going on, Apple? 

None of them quite live up to my two past loves: my LG Lotus LX600 phone and my Sony Walkman NW-E005 MP3 player. 

I've never given up wired earbuds so I was ahead of all those trend pieces. I use a Mangotek Lightning-to-3.5mm headphone jack adapter to connect them to my phone. 

I have had so many ebook readers, but I prefer paper to them all. Still, my Kindle Paperwhite is perfect for traveling or when I’m too impatient to wait for a book to be released in paperback.

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