Abstract
The hydrodynamics of a self-propelling swimmer undergoing intermittent S-start swimming are investigated extensively with varying duty cycle
$DC$
, swimming period
$T$
, and tailbeat amplitude
$A$
. We find that the steady time-averaged swimming speed
$\bar {U}_x$
increases directly with
$A$
, but varies inversely with
$DC$
and
$T$
, where there is a maximal improvement of
$541.29\,\%$
over continuous cruising swimming. Our results reveal two scaling laws, in the form of input versus output relations, that relate the swimmer's kinematics to its hydrodynamic performance: swimming speed and efficiency. A smaller
$DC$
causes increased fluctuations in the swimmer's velocity generation. A larger
$A$
, on the other hand, allows the swimmer to reach steady swimming more quickly. Although we set out to determine scaling laws for intermittent S-start swimming, these scaling laws extend naturally to burst-and-coast and continuous modes of swimming. Additionally, we have identified, categorized and linked the wake structures produced by intermittent S-start swimmers with their velocity generation.
Funder
Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)