4.5 Article

Jumping archer fish exhibit multiple modes of fin-fin interaction

期刊

BIOINSPIRATION & BIOMIMETICS
卷 16, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-3190/abb78e

关键词

fish swimming; fin interactions; aquatic jumping; particle image velocimetry

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET-1703978]
  2. ONR DURIP [N00014-12-1-0787]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Study on the archer fish jumping behavior found that interactions between fins and tail affect the propulsion and trajectory control, suggesting that these interactions compensate for kinematic variations and aiming postures. The fish utilize multiple propulsive vortices in the wake to reach necessary prey heights, demonstrating that beneficial hydrodynamic interactions can be generated effectively using a single set of actuators in high-performance scenarios.
Aquatic organisms jumping for aerial prey require high-performance propulsion, accurate aim, and trajectory control to succeed. Archer fish, capable of jumping up to twice their body length out of the water, address these considerations through multifaceted fin and body kinematics. In this study, we utilized 3D synthetic aperture particle image velocimetry to visualize the wakes of archer fish throughout the jumping process. We found that multiple modes of interaction between the anal and caudal fins occur during jump behaviors. Time-resolved volumetric measurements presented herein illustrate the hydrodynamics of each interaction mode in detail. Additionally, regardless of which fin uses and interactions were exhibited during a jump, we found similar relationships between the cumulative impulse of multiple propulsive vortices in the wake and the instantaneous ballistic momentum of the fish. Our results suggests that fin use may compensate for variations in individual kinematic events and in the aiming posture assumed prior to jumping and highlight how interactions between tailbeats and other fins help the archer fish reach necessary prey heights in a spatially- and visually-constrained environment. In the broader context of bioinspired propulsion, the archer fish exemplifies that multiple beneficial hydrodynamic interactions can be generated in a high-performance scenario using a single set of actuators.

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