Therecoilmotionsinfreeswimming,givenbylateralandangularrigidmotionsdueto the interaction with the surrounding water, are of great importance for a correct evaluation of both the forward locomotion speed and efficiency of a fish-like body. Their contribution is essential for calculating the actual movements of the body rear end whose prominent influence on the generation of the proper body deformation was established a long time ago. In particular, the recoil motions are found here to promote a dramatic improvement of the performance when damaged fishes, namely for a partial functionality of the tail or even for its complete loss, are considered. In fact, the body deformation, which turns out to become oscillating and symmetric in the extreme case, is shown to recover in the water frame a kind of undulation leading to a certain locomotion speed though at the expense of a large energy consumption. There has been a deep interest in the subject since the infancy of swimming studies, and a revival has recently arisen for biomimetic applications to robotic fish-like bodies. We intend here to apply a theoretical impulse model to the oscillating fish in free swimming as a suitable test case to strengthen our belief in the beneficial effects of the recoil motions. At the same time, we intend to exploit the linearity of the model to detect from the numerical simulations the intrinsic physical reasons related to added mass and vorticity release behind the experimental observations.

How free swimming fosters the locomotion of a purely oscillating fish-like body / Paniccia, Damiano; Padovani, Luca; Graziani, Giorgio; Lugni, Claudio; Piva, Renzo. - In: BIOMIMETICS. - ISSN 2313-7673. - 8:5(2023). [10.3390/biomimetics8050401]

How free swimming fosters the locomotion of a purely oscillating fish-like body

Damiano Paniccia;Luca Padovani;Giorgio Graziani
;
Renzo Piva
2023

Abstract

Therecoilmotionsinfreeswimming,givenbylateralandangularrigidmotionsdueto the interaction with the surrounding water, are of great importance for a correct evaluation of both the forward locomotion speed and efficiency of a fish-like body. Their contribution is essential for calculating the actual movements of the body rear end whose prominent influence on the generation of the proper body deformation was established a long time ago. In particular, the recoil motions are found here to promote a dramatic improvement of the performance when damaged fishes, namely for a partial functionality of the tail or even for its complete loss, are considered. In fact, the body deformation, which turns out to become oscillating and symmetric in the extreme case, is shown to recover in the water frame a kind of undulation leading to a certain locomotion speed though at the expense of a large energy consumption. There has been a deep interest in the subject since the infancy of swimming studies, and a revival has recently arisen for biomimetic applications to robotic fish-like bodies. We intend here to apply a theoretical impulse model to the oscillating fish in free swimming as a suitable test case to strengthen our belief in the beneficial effects of the recoil motions. At the same time, we intend to exploit the linearity of the model to detect from the numerical simulations the intrinsic physical reasons related to added mass and vorticity release behind the experimental observations.
2023
aquatic locomotion; swimming performance; fish tail damage; recoil; fluid–structure interactions; biomimetic fluid dynamics
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
How free swimming fosters the locomotion of a purely oscillating fish-like body / Paniccia, Damiano; Padovani, Luca; Graziani, Giorgio; Lugni, Claudio; Piva, Renzo. - In: BIOMIMETICS. - ISSN 2313-7673. - 8:5(2023). [10.3390/biomimetics8050401]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1687414
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