Characteristics of undulatory locomotion in granular media
Zhiwei Peng, On Shun Pak, Gwynn J. Elfring

TL;DR
This paper investigates undulatory locomotion in granular media using a resistive force theory, analyzing swimming characteristics of a slender filament and identifying optimal waveforms for propulsion efficiency.
Contribution
It applies a recently proposed resistive force theory to granular media, providing new insights into the locomotion mechanics and optimal waveforms for sand-swimming organisms.
Findings
Sawtooth waveform is optimal for propulsion at fixed power.
Finite and infinite swimmers exhibit similar propulsion characteristics.
Drifting and pitching effects influence swimming efficiency.
Abstract
Undulatory locomotion is ubiquitous in nature and observed in different media, from the swimming of flagellated microorganisms in biological fluids, to the slithering of snakes on land, or the locomotion of sandfish lizards in sand. Despite the similarity in the undulating pattern, the swimming characteristics depend on the rheological properties of different media. Analysis of locomotion in granular materials is relatively less developed compared with fluids partially due to a lack of validated force models but recently a resistive force theory in granular media has been proposed and shown useful in studying the locomotion of a sand-swimming lizard. Here we employ the proposed model to investigate the swimming characteristics of a slender filament, of both finite and infinite length, undulating in a granular medium and compare the results with swimming in viscous fluids. In particular,…
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