Passive appendages generate drift through symmetry breaking

Plants and animals use plumes, barbs, tails, feathers, hairs and fins to aid locomotion. Many of these appendages are not actively controlled, instead they have to interact passively with the surrounding fluid to generate motion. Here, we use theory, experiments and numerical simulations to show tha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2014-10, Vol.5 (1), p.5310-5310, Article 5310
Hauptverfasser: Lācis, U., Brosse, N., Ingremeau, F., Mazzino, A., Lundell, F., Kellay, H., Bagheri, S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Plants and animals use plumes, barbs, tails, feathers, hairs and fins to aid locomotion. Many of these appendages are not actively controlled, instead they have to interact passively with the surrounding fluid to generate motion. Here, we use theory, experiments and numerical simulations to show that an object with a protrusion in a separated flow drifts sideways by exploiting a symmetry-breaking instability similar to the instability of an inverted pendulum. Our model explains why the straight position of an appendage in a fluid flow is unstable and how it stabilizes either to the left or right of the incoming flow direction. It is plausible that organisms with appendages in a separated flow use this newly discovered mechanism for locomotion; examples include the drift of plumed seeds without wind and the passive reorientation of motile animals. Passive mechanisms without energy input are the only way for non-motile organisms to disperse in fluids. Here, the authors use the analogue of the inverted pendulum motion upon gravity to explain the passive drift of a body with a protrusion to the sides of an incoming fluid stream.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms6310