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First published online June 26, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, iii (2009)
Copyright © 2009 The Company of Biologists Limited
doi: 10.1242/jeb.034413
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Inside JEB |
DOLPHINS' FLIPPERS ACT LIKE AEROFOILS
kathryn{at}biologists.com
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We can only marvel at the way that dolphins, whales and porpoises scythe through water. Their finlike flippers seem perfectly adapted for maximum aquatic agility. However, no one had ever analysed how the animals' flippers interact with water; the hydrodynamic lift that they generate, the drag that they experience or their hydrodynamic efficiency. Laurens Howle and Paul Weber from Duke University teamed up with Mark Murray from the United States Naval Academy and Frank Fish from West Chester University, to find out more about the hydrodynamics of cetacean flippers (p. 2149).
Using computer tomography scanning of the fins of seven different species ranging from the slow swimming Amazon River dolphin and pygmy sperm whale to the super-fast striped dolphin, the team made scaled models of the flippers of each species. Then they measured the lift and drag experienced by the flipper at inclinations ranging from –45 deg. to +45 deg. in a flow tunnel running at a speed that would have been the equivalent of 2 ms–1 for the full scale fin.
Comparing the lift and drag coefficients that the team calculated for each flipper at different inclination angles, they found that the flippers behave like modern engineered aerofoils. Defining the flippers' shapes as triangular, swept pointed or swept rounded, the team used computer simulations of the fluid flows around the flippers and found that sweptback flippers generate lift like modern delta wing aircraft. Calculating the flippers' efficiencies, the team found that the bottle nose dolphin's triangular flippers are the most efficient while the harbour porpoise and Atlantic white-sided dolphin's fins were the least efficient.
Commenting that environmental and performance factors probably play a significant role in the evolution of cetacean flipper shapes and their hydrodynamics, Howle and his colleagues are keen to find out more about the link between the flippers' performances and the environment that cetacean's negotiate on a daily basis.
References
Weber, P. W., Howle, L. E., Murray, M. M. and Fish, F. E.
(2009). Lift and drag performance of odontocete cetacean
flippers. J. Exp. Biol.
212,2149
-2158.
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