Bioinspiration & biomimetics
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The noseleaf and pinnae of horseshoe bats (Rhinolophus ferrumequinum) have both been shown to actively deform during biosonar operation. Since these baffle structures directly affect the properties of the animals biosonar system, this work mimics horseshoe bat sonar system with the goal of developing a platform to study the dynamic sensing principles horseshoe bats employ. Consequently, two robotic devices were developed to mimic the dynamic emission and reception characteristics of horseshoe bats. ⋯ Amplitude modulations to the outgoing and incoming sonar pulse information across spatial direction were observed for all pinnae and noseleaf local shape feature combinations. Peak modulation variance generated by motion of the pinnae and combinations of the noseleaf and pinnae approached a white Gaussian noise variance bound. It was found the dynamic emitter generated less modulation than either the combined or reception scenarios.