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Journal of Experimental Biology 158,117-132 (1991)
Published by Company of Biologists 1991


Sailing Downwind: Aerodynamic Performance of the Velella Sail

LISBETH FRANCIS 1

1 Biology Department, Bates College Lewiston, ME 04240, USA

Using a wind tunnel built over a shallow pool and methods devised for measuring the performance of yacht sails, I describe aerodynamic performance in situ for the sailor-by-the-wind, Velella velella. By contrast with designers of the modern yacht mainsail, natural selection has apparently favored stability and seaworthiness over performance to windward. The Velella sail is a low aspect ratio airfoil with an unusually flat polar plot. Primarily a drag-based locomotory structure, this thin, leaf-like sail generates maximum force when oriented at attack angles between 50° and 90°. In the wind tunnel, free-sailing animals spontaneously assumed stable orientations at attack angles ranging from 28° to 87° and sailed with their hulls approximately broadside to the apparent flow of oncoming water. At these angles, aerodynamic force on the sail is asymmetrical, with the center of pressure upwind of the sail midline. Since aerodynamic force on the sail is balanced at equilibrium by hydrodynamic force on the hull, this orientation must be caused by asymmetrical forces acting on surface and underwater parts as the wind drags the animal along the surface of the water.

Key words: airfoil, aspect ratio, Chondrophora, drag, locomotion, pleuston, wind, Velella

Accepted on March 7, 1991







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 1991