| Themes > Science > Physics > Fluid Dynamics > Flying the flag for fluid dynamics > Aerodynamics > Hydro- and Aerodynamics of Animal Swimming and Flight > Hydrodynamics of animal propulsion |
There has long been
controversy over the reputed high efficiency of certain swimming animals,
dolphins in particular. Observations of their swimming speed, and
calculations of the likely drag on a well-streamlined body under those
conditions implied a tremendous power output would be required -- well
above what could reasonably be produced by the available musculature. The
only conclusion seemed to be that the friction and/or form drags must in
fact be very much smaller than usual, and hopes were raised that hitherto
unknown drag reduction mechanisms could be found in nature, and then
emulated in engineering designs. Unfortunately, the original observations
were themselves flawed, as were some of the calculations, and the entire
phenomenon was shown to be a chimera that dematerialised upon close
scrutiny.
Much more fruitful, turned out to be some of the research work on the fundamental hydrodynamic mechanisms of aquatic propulsion. Following the initial impetus given by Prof. Sir James Lighthill in his groundbreaking (or should that be fluid-shearing?) review/research articles on aquatic animal propulsion (see [Li69], [Li70]), H.K. Cheng and colleagues ([HK76], [CM84], [KSC90]) outlined the design principles, and geometry and kinematics of oscillating, lifting surfaces of high hydrodynamic efficiency. In particular the offsetting effects of sweep and local centreline curvature were identified, and the two most visible planforms of the tails of fast fish, the crescent-shaped lunate tail, and the swept-back v-tail were both shown to be potentially highly efficient solutions the problem. The next time you see a picture in a sport fishing paper of a marlin, swordfish, tuna, or any of the fastest, most powerful fish, note the lunate tail with it's curved, thin (high aspect ratio) shape. |
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