Generalization of waving‐plate theory to multiple interacting swimmers

Author:

Baddoo Peter J.1ORCID,Moore Nicholas J.2ORCID,Oza Anand U.3ORCID,Crowdy Darren G.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA United States

2. Department of Mathematics Colgate University Hamilton NY United States

3. Department of Mathematical Sciences Center for Applied Mathematics and Statistics New Jersey Institute of Technology Newark NJ United States

4. Department of Mathematics Imperial College London London United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractEarly research in aerodynamics and biological propulsion was dramatically advanced by the analytical solutions of Theodorsen, von Kármán, Wu and others. While these classical solutions apply only to isolated swimmers, the flow interactions between multiple swimmers are relevant to many practical applications, including the schooling and flocking of animal collectives. In this work, we derive a class of solutions that describe the hydrodynamic interactions between an arbitrary number of swimmers in a two‐dimensional inviscid fluid. Our approach is rooted in multiply‐connected complex analysis and exploits several recent results. Specifically, the transcendental (Schottky–Klein) prime function serves as the basic building block to construct the appropriate conformal maps and leading‐edge‐suction functions, which allows us to solve the modified Schwarz problem that arises. As such, our solutions generalize classical thin aerofoil theory, specifically Wu's waving‐plate analysis, to the case of multiple swimmers. For the case of a pair of interacting swimmers, we develop an efficient numerical implementation that allows rapid computations of the forces on each swimmer. We investigate flow‐mediated equilibria and find excellent agreement between our new solutions and previously reported experimental results. Our solutions recover and unify disparate results in the literature, thereby opening the door for future studies into the interactions between multiple swimmers.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

National Science Foundation

Simons Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Applied Mathematics,General Mathematics

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