Escape swimming is a crucial behavior by which undulatory swimmers evade potential threats. The hydrodynamics of escape swimming have not been well studied, particularly for anguilliform swimmers, such as the sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus. For this study, we compared the kinematics and hydrodynamics of larval sea lampreys with those of lampreys accelerating from rest during escape swimming. We used experimentally derived velocity fields to calculate pressure fields and distributions of thrust and drag along the body. Lampreys initiated acceleration from rest with the formation of a high-amplitude body bend at approximately one-quarter body length posterior to the head. This deep body bend produced two high-pressure regions from which the m...
Frogs are animals that are capable of locomotion in two physically different media, aquatic and terr...
Escape locomotion of the common dock shrimp, Pandalus danae Stimpson, is the result of a rapid flexi...
Swimming animals need to generate propulsive force to overcome drag, regardless of whether they swim...
Escape swimming is a crucial behavior by which undulatory swimmers evade potential threats. The hydr...
Swimming animals commonly bend their bodies to generate thrust. For undulating animals such as eels ...
Swimming animals commonly bend their bodies to generate thrust. For undulating animals such as eels ...
For nearly a century, researchers have tried to understand the swimming of aquatic animals in terms ...
A central and long-standing tenet in the conceptualization of animal swimming is the idea that propu...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 2019Catal...
An abundance of swimming animals have converged upon a common swimming strategy using multiple propu...
Moving through a dense fluid such as water presents some unique challenges to minimizing energy use ...
An undulatory pattern of body bending in which waves pass along the body from head to tail is a majo...
The propulsive efficiencies of multi-functional appendage configurations in a small drag-based swimm...
We explored how the flattened and rounded pectoral disc of the ocellate river stingray (Potamotrygon...
Undulatory motion of the body is the dominant mode of locomotion in fishes, and numerous studies of ...
Frogs are animals that are capable of locomotion in two physically different media, aquatic and terr...
Escape locomotion of the common dock shrimp, Pandalus danae Stimpson, is the result of a rapid flexi...
Swimming animals need to generate propulsive force to overcome drag, regardless of whether they swim...
Escape swimming is a crucial behavior by which undulatory swimmers evade potential threats. The hydr...
Swimming animals commonly bend their bodies to generate thrust. For undulating animals such as eels ...
Swimming animals commonly bend their bodies to generate thrust. For undulating animals such as eels ...
For nearly a century, researchers have tried to understand the swimming of aquatic animals in terms ...
A central and long-standing tenet in the conceptualization of animal swimming is the idea that propu...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 2019Catal...
An abundance of swimming animals have converged upon a common swimming strategy using multiple propu...
Moving through a dense fluid such as water presents some unique challenges to minimizing energy use ...
An undulatory pattern of body bending in which waves pass along the body from head to tail is a majo...
The propulsive efficiencies of multi-functional appendage configurations in a small drag-based swimm...
We explored how the flattened and rounded pectoral disc of the ocellate river stingray (Potamotrygon...
Undulatory motion of the body is the dominant mode of locomotion in fishes, and numerous studies of ...
Frogs are animals that are capable of locomotion in two physically different media, aquatic and terr...
Escape locomotion of the common dock shrimp, Pandalus danae Stimpson, is the result of a rapid flexi...
Swimming animals need to generate propulsive force to overcome drag, regardless of whether they swim...