Role of body stiffness in undulatory swimming: Insights from robotic and computational models

In an effort to understand the locomotion dynamics of a simple vertebrate, the lamprey, both physical and computational models have been developed. A key feature of these models is the ability to vary the passive stiffness of portions of the swimmer, focusing on highly flexible models similar in material properties to lampreys and other anguilliform fishes. The physical model is a robotic lampreylike swimmer that is actuated along most of its length but has passively flexible tails of different stiffnesses. The computational model is a two-dimensional model that captures fluid-structure interactions using an immersed boundary framework. This simulated lamprey is passively flexible throughout its length and is also actuated along most of its length by the activation of muscle forces. Although the three-dimensional robot and the two-dimensional computational swimmer are such different constructs, we demonstrate that the wake structures generated by these models share many features and we examine how flexibility affects these features. Both models produce wakes with two or more same-sign vortices shed each time the tail changes direction (a “2P” or higher-order wake). In general, wakes become less coherent as tail flexibility increases. We examine the pressure distribution near the tail tip and the timing of vortex formation in both cases and find good agreement. Because we include flexibility, we are able to estimate resonant frequencies for several of the robotic and computational swimmers. We find that

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