4.5 Article

Unifying constructal theory for scale effects in running, swimming and flying

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 209, Issue 2, Pages 238-248

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.01974

Keywords

design in nature; animal locomotion; optimality theory; optimal speed; maximum range speed; optimal frequency; stride frequency; wing beat frequency; Strouhal number; force output; scaling; allometry; turbulence; gravitational wave; constructal theory

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Biologists have treated the view that fundamental differences exist between running, flying and swimming as evident, because the forms of locomotion and the animals are so different: limbs and wings vs body undulations, neutrally buoyant vs weighted bodies, etc. Here we show that all forms of locomotion can be described by a single physics theory. The theory is an invocation of the principle that flow systems evolve in such a way that they destroy minimum useful energy (exergy, food). This optimization approach delivers in surprisingly direct fashion the observed relations between speed and body mass (M-b) raised to 1/6, and between frequency (stride, flapping) and M-b(-1/6), and shows why these relations hold for running, flying and swimming. Animal locomotion is an optimized two-step intermittency: an optimal balance is achieved between the vertical loss of useful energy (lifting the body weight, which later drops), and the horizontal loss caused by friction against the surrounding medium. The theory predicts additional features of animal design: the Strouhal number constant, which holds for running as well as flying and swimming, the proportionality between force output and mass in animal motors, and the fact that undulating swimming and flapping flight occur only if the body Reynolds number exceeds approximately 30. This theory, and the general body of work known as constructal theory, together now show that animal movement (running, flying, swimming) and fluid eddy movement (turbulent structure) are both forms of optimized intermittent movement.

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