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Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of the Swimming of Microscopic Organisms

Geoffrey Ingram Taylor
- 22 Nov 1951 - 
- Vol. 209, Iss: 1099, pp 447-461
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TLDR
In this article, it was shown that if the waves down neighbouring tails are in phase, very much less energy is dissipated in the fluid between them than when the waves are in opposite phase.
Abstract
Large objects which propel themselves in air or water make use of inertia in the surrounding fluid. The propulsive organ pushes the fluid backwards, while the resistance of the body gives the fluid a forward momentum. The forward and backward momenta exactly balance, but the propulsive organ and the resistance can be thought about as acting separately. This conception cannot be transferred to problems of propulsion in microscopic bodies for which the stresses due to viscosity may be many thousands of times as great as those due to inertia. No case of self-propulsion in a viscous fluid due to purely viscous forces seems to have been discussed. The motion of a fluid near a sheet down which waves of lateral displacement are propagated is described. It is found that the sheet moves forwards at a rate 2π 2 b 2 /λ 2 times the velocity of propagation of the waves. Here b is the amplitude and λ the wave-length. This analysis seems to explain how a propulsive tail can move a body through a viscous fluid without relying on reaction due to inertia. The energy dissipation and stress in the tail are also calculated. The work is extended to explore the reaction between the tails of two neighbouring small organisms with propulsive tails. It is found that if the waves down neighbouring tails are in phase very much less energy is dissipated in the fluid between them than when the waves are in opposite phase. It is also found that when the phase of the wave in one tail lags behind that in the other there is a strong reaction, due to the viscous stress in the fluid between them, which tends to force the two wave trains into phase. It is in fact observed that the tails of spermatozoa wave in unison when they are close to one another and pointing the same way.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

An analysis of the swimming problem of a singly flagellated micro-organism in an MHD fluid flowing through a porous medium

TL;DR: In this paper, a single flagellum is used for propulsion in a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) fluid flowing through a porous medium, where the flow is modelled by appropriate equations and the organism is modeled by an infinite flexible but inextensible transversely waving sheet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fluid elasticity increases the locomotion of flexible swimmers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used Particle Image Velocimetry to visualize the flow field and found a significant difference in the amount of shear between the rear and leading parts of the swimmer head.

Drag and thrust effects of Viscoelastic fluids

Gaurav Goyal
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of swimming gait on bio-locomotion and characterizing the drag reducing fluids used for gravel-packing operations in the petroleum industry was studied. But the authors focused on the swimming of simplified two-dimensional bodies at low Reynolds numbers in complex fluids using the reciprocal theorem.
Posted Content

Stokes flows in three-dimensional fluids with odd viscosity

TL;DR: In this paper, the Stokeslet flow has been applied to many-body sedimentation to reveal the emergence of non-reciprocal hydrodynamic interactions and chiral modifications to particle trajectories.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cilia beating patterns are not hydrodynamically optimal

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the hydrodynamic performance of two cilia beating patterns reconstructed from experimental data and found that pattern (B) outperformed pattern (A) in almost all three measures, including hydrodynamics, including the maximum internal moments generated by the cilia.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sea-urchin spermatozoa.

Lord Rothschild
- 01 Feb 1951 - 
TL;DR: The head of the sea‐urchin spermatozoon is pear‐shaped and axially symmetrical, and the tail, which terminates in an axial fibre, probably contains spiral or coiled structures, as in mammalian spermatozoa.
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