Those who have observed the languid pace of seahorses or seadragons swimming might think these fish only hunt slow prey. In fact, the tiny crustaceans on which they feed are extremely quick, capable of velocities over 500 body lengths per second. Instead of speed, the seahorse relies on stealth to capture its prey, as shown in the holographic video above. Seahorses use a pivot method to feed, simultaneously shifting their snouts up and sucking water in to catch their target. But this method of feeding only works for distances of about 1 mm. To get that close in the first place, the seahorse must approach its prey without alerting it. Researchers found that both the seahorse’s head shape and its natural posture create a hydrodynamic quiet zone just off the seahorse’s snout, directly in its strike zone. Fluid velocity and deformation rates in this region are significantly lower than those around the rest of the seahorse’s face when it moves, allowing the fish to sneak up on its prey. These adaptations are remarkably effective, too; the researchers observed that the seahorses were able to position themselves within 1mm of their prey without alerting them 84% of the time. (Video credit: B. Gemmell et al.; via Discover)
Tag: hydrodynamics

Sharkskin Fluid Dynamics
Sharks have evolved some incredible fluid dynamical abilities. Instead of scales, their skin is covered in microscopic structures called denticles. To give you a sense of size, each denticle in the black and white image above is about 100 microns across. Denticles are asymmetric and overlap one another, creating a preferential flow direction along the shark. When water tries to move opposite the preferred direction, the denticles will bristle, like in the animation above. The bristled denticles form an obstacle for the reversed flow without any effort on the shark’s part. Since local flow reversal is an early sign of separation, researchers theorize that this bristling tendency prevents flow along the shark’s skin from separating. Keeping flow attached, especially along the shark’s tail, is vital not only to the shark’s agility but to keeping its drag low. Researchers have even begun 3D printing artificial shark skin to try and harness the animal’s hydrodynamic prowess. For much more shark-themed science, be sure to check out this week’s “Several Consecutive Calendar Days Dedicated to Predatory Cartilaginous Fishes” video series by SciShow, It’s Okay to be Smart, The Brain Scoop, Smarter Every Day, and Minute Physics. (Image credits: J. Oeffner and G. Lauder; A. Lang et al.; original video; jidanchaomian)

Advantages of Schooling

Many fish swim in close proximity to one another in large schools, causing scientists to wonder if this behavior is motivated primarily by defense against predators or whether fish derive some hydrodynamic advantages from schooling. Examining the fluid dynamics of an entire school of fish is rather impractical, so researchers approximate two neighboring swimmers using flapping hydrofoils. The images above show flow visualizations of the wakes of these two mechanical swimmers. When the two hydrofoils flap in-phase with one another (top image), one oscillation period produces a complicated pattern of many vortices zig-zagging behind the foils. This configuration produces more efficient propulsion than a single hydrofoil, meaning that more of the energy in the wake is used to produce thrust. The cost, however, is reduced thrust overall. The bottom image shows the wake pattern for hydrofoils flapping out-of-phase. This behavior enhanced thrust without reducing propulsive efficiency. The results suggest that schooling fish might choose different swimming strategies depending on the situation. (Image credits: P. Dewey et al.)

Iceberg Calving
When sections of glaciers break off to create icebergs, scientists call it calving. Usually large sections of ice will break off and immediately capsize, with an energy equivalent to up to 40 kilotons of TNT. These large events are sufficient to cause measurable seismic signals. How hydrodynamic forces impact the contact and pressure forces between the calving iceberg and the glacier are still being researched, though recent laboratory experiments and numerical models suggest that hydrodynamics substantially increase these forces. The video above shows one of the largest calving events ever caught on camera, and the scale of the process is just stunning. (Video credit: Chasing Ice; additional information from J. C. Burton et al. 2012; submitted by jshoer)

Shark Wakes
Volumetric imaging of swimming spiny dogfish, a type of shark, shows that their distinctively asymmetric tails produce a set of dual-linked vortex rings with every half beat of their tail. The figure above shows data from the actual shark on the right (b,d,f) and a similarly shaped robotic tail on the left (a,c,e). The second row contains lateral views (c,d) and the bottom row contains dorsal views (e,f) of the vorticity isosurfaces measured. The robotic tail does not demonstrate the same double vortex structure, leading scientists to suspect that the shark may be actively stiffening its tail mid-stroke to control its wake. The finding could help engineers design aquatic robots whose morphing fins help it swim more efficiently. For more, see Wired.

Jellyfish Flow
Florescent dye reveals the flow pattern of ocean water around a swimming jellyfish. Some researchers posit that fluid drift associated with the swimming of marine animals may be as substantial a factor in ocean mixing as turbulence caused by the wind and tides. If true, modeling of climate change–past, present, and future–would need to take into account the biology of the ocean as well! #

Sharkskin-Style Swimsuits
Fans of swimming will recall the controversies of the now-banned sharkskin-style swimsuits that helped break so many records in the past few years. The suits decrease drag on a swimmer both by making them more hydrodynamic in form and by drastically reducing skin friction where the water meets the swimmer’s body. In addition to decreasing the two major sources of drag on a swimmer, the compression provided by the material can help increase blood flow to muscles. These improvements came at a high material cost, though, and, since the technology was not viable for all athletes, it has since been banned.

Propeller Cavitation
Gas bubbles can form in a flowing liquid in areas where the pressure drops below its vapor pressure. This process, called cavitation, is a major problem for engineers because the collapse of the bubbles upon entering a high pressure area can damage metal surfaces. Shown here is cavitation on a fully submerged boat propeller.

Bristling Scales Give Sharks Speed
The shortfin mako shark is one of the ocean’s fastest and most agile hunters, thanks in part to flexible scales along its body. As water flows around the shark’s body, the scales bristle to angles in excess of 60 degrees. This causes turbulence in the boundary layer along the shark’s body and prevents boundary layer separation which would otherwise increase the shark’s drag. In this respect, the scales serve much the same purpose as dimples on a golf ball. (Abstract, National Geographic article) #








