Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33620, USA.
Whitman Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2021 Jan 13;288(1942):20202494. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2494. Epub 2021 Jan 6.
It has been well documented that animals (and machines) swimming or flying near a solid boundary get a boost in performance. This ground effect is often modelled as an interaction between a mirrored pair of vortices represented by a true vortex and an opposite sign 'virtual vortex' on the other side of the wall. However, most animals do not swim near solid surfaces and thus near body vortex-vortex interactions in open-water swimmers have been poorly investigated. In this study, we examine the most energetically efficient metazoan swimmer known to date, the jellyfish , to elucidate the role that vortex interactions can play in animals that swim away from solid boundaries. We used high-speed video tracking, laser-based digital particle image velocimetry (dPIV) and an algorithm for extracting pressure fields from flow velocity vectors to quantify swimming performance and the effect of near body vortex-vortex interactions. Here, we show that a vortex ring (stopping vortex), created underneath the animal during the previous swim cycle, is critical for increasing propulsive performance. This well-positioned stopping vortex acts in the same way as a virtual vortex during wall-effect performance enhancement, by helping converge fluid at the underside of the propulsive surface and generating significantly higher pressures which result in greater thrust. These findings advocate that jellyfish can generate a wall-effect boost in open water by creating what amounts to a 'virtual wall' between two real, opposite sign vortex rings. This explains the significant propulsive advantage jellyfish possess over other metazoans and represents important implications for bio-engineered propulsion systems.
有大量文献记载,动物(和机器)在靠近固体边界处游动或飞行时,其性能会得到提升。这种地面效应通常被建模为在壁面另一侧镜像对涡旋的相互作用,其中一个涡旋为真实涡旋,另一个为相反符号的“虚拟涡旋”。然而,大多数动物不会在靠近固体表面的地方游动,因此,在开阔水域中游泳的动物的近体涡-涡相互作用研究甚少。在这项研究中,我们研究了目前已知的最节能的后生动物游泳者——水母,以阐明在远离固体边界的动物中,涡旋相互作用可能发挥的作用。我们使用高速视频跟踪、基于激光的数字粒子图像测速(dPIV)和一种从流场速度矢量中提取压力场的算法,来量化游泳性能和近体涡-涡相互作用的影响。在这里,我们表明,在动物前一次游动周期中,在动物下方产生的涡环(停止涡旋)对于提高推进性能至关重要。这个位置良好的停止涡旋在增强壁面效应的性能时,起到了类似于虚拟涡旋的作用,它有助于在推进表面的下侧汇聚流体,并产生显著更高的压力,从而产生更大的推力。这些发现表明,水母可以通过在两个真实的、相反符号的涡环之间产生所谓的“虚拟壁”,在开阔水域中产生壁面效应提升。这解释了水母相对于其他后生动物具有显著推进优势的原因,这对生物工程推进系统具有重要意义。