A 26-Gram Butterfly-Inspired Robot Achieving Autonomous Tailless Flight
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The flight of biological butterflies represents a unique aerodynamic regime where high-amplitude, low-frequency wingstrokes induce significant body undulations and inertial fluctuations. While existing tailless flapping-wing micro air vehicles typically employ high-frequency kinematics to minimize such perturbations, the lepidopteran flight envelope remains a challenging and underexplored frontier for autonomous robotics. Here, we present AirPulse, a 26-gram butterfly-inspired robot that achieves the first onboard, closed-loop controlled flight for a tailless two-winged platform at this scale. It replicates key biomechanical traits of butterfly flight, utilizing low-aspect-ratio, compliant carbon-fiber-reinforced wings and low-frequency flapping that reproduces characteristic biological body undulations. Leveraging a quantitative mapping of control effectiveness, we introduce a hierarchical control architecture featuring state estimator, attitude controller, and central pattern generator with Stroke Timing Asymmetry Rhythm (STAR), which translates attitude control demands into smooth and stable wingstroke timing and angle-offset modulations. Free-flight experiments demonstrate stable climbing and directed turning maneuvers, proving that autonomous locomotion is achievable even within oscillatory dynamical regimes. By bridging biological morphology with a minimalist control architecture, AirPulse serves as both a hardware-validated model for decoding butterfly flight dynamics and a prototype for a new class of collision-resilient aerial robots. Its lightweight and compliant structure offers a non-invasive solution for a wide range of applications, such as ecological monitoring and confined-space inspection, where traditional drones may fall short.