Jung Sunghwan
Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Interface Focus. 2025 May 16;15(2):20240055. doi: 10.1098/rsfs.2024.0055.
Aquatic animals that live in water often leap out to catch prey in the air, while terrestrial and aerial animals dive into water to hunt aquatic animals. Some animals locomote on the water surface or lap water by repeated slamming and water-exiting motions. These dynamic interactions with the water-air interface have similarities in engineering, where water entry and exit problems play crucial roles in an object crossing the interface in industrial and physical systems. This review examines the physics of water entry and exit in biological systems through fluid mechanics principles originally developed for engineering applications. By identifying common governing forces, we aim to establish connections between biological strategies and engineering solutions, potentially leading innovations in bio-inspired technology.
生活在水中的水生动物常常跃出水面捕捉空中的猎物,而陆生和空中动物则潜入水中捕食水生动物。一些动物在水面上移动或通过反复拍打和出水动作舔水。这些与水 - 空气界面的动态相互作用在工程学上有相似之处,在工业和物理系统中,物体穿过界面时的入水和出水问题起着关键作用。本综述通过最初为工程应用而开发的流体力学原理,研究生物系统中入水和出水的物理过程。通过识别共同的主导力,我们旨在建立生物策略与工程解决方案之间的联系,这可能会引领仿生技术的创新。