Stability of Underwater Periodic Locomotion
Fangxu Jing, Eva Kanso

TL;DR
This paper investigates the stability of periodic swimming in aquatic animals using a simplified model, revealing complex dependencies on parameters and suggesting organisms can balance stability and maneuverability through control of their flapping motions.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical analysis of the stability of periodic locomotion in a simplified aquatic model, including closed-form solutions and stability criteria based on Floquet theory.
Findings
Stability depends nonlinearly on flapping parameters.
Switching between stable and unstable motions occurs as parameters vary.
Organisms may manipulate flapping to balance stability and maneuverability.
Abstract
Most aquatic vertebrates swim by lateral flapping of their bodies and caudal fins. While much effort has been devoted to understanding the flapping kinematics and its influence on the swimming efficiency, little is known about the stability (or lack of) of periodic swimming. It is believed that stability limits maneuverability and body designs/flapping motions that are adapted for stable swimming are not suitable for high maneuverability and vice versa. In this paper, we consider a simplified model of a planar elliptic body undergoing prescribed periodic heaving and pitching in potential flow. We show that periodic locomotion can be achieved due to the resulting hydrodynamic forces, and its value depends on several parameters including the aspect ratio of the body, the amplitudes and phases of the prescribed flapping. We obtain closed-form solutions for the locomotion and efficiency for…
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