Smart wing rotation and trailing-edge vortices enable high frequency mosquito flight

Mosquitoes exhibit unusual wing kinematics; their long, slender wings flap at remarkably high frequencies for their size (>800 Hz)and with lower stroke amplitudes than any other insect group1. This shifts weight support away from the translation-dominated, aerodynamic mechanisms used by most insects2, as well as by helicopters and aeroplanes, towards poorly understood rotational mechanisms that occur when pitching at the end of each half-stroke.

Read the article: https://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v544/n7648/full/nature21727.html