Passive appendages aid locomotion through symmetry breaking

ORAL

Abstract

Plants and animals use plumes, barbs, tails, feathers, hairs, fins, and other types of appendages to aid locomotion. Despite their enormous variation, passive appendages may contribute to locomotion by exploiting the same physical mechanism. We present a new mechanism that applies to body appendages surrounded by a separated flow, which often develops behind moving bodies larger than a few millimeters. We use theory, experiments, and numerical simulations to show that bodies with protrusions turn and drift by exploiting a symmetry-breaking instability similar to the instability of an inverted pendulum. Our model explains why the straight position of an appendage in flowing fluid is unstable and how it stabilizes either to the left or right of the incoming fluid flow direction. The discovery suggests a new mechanism of locomotion that may be relevant for certain organisms; for example, how plumed seeds may drift without wind and how motile animals may passively reorient themselves.

Authors

  • Shervin Bagheri

    • Linne Flow Centre, KTH Mechanics, 10044 Stockholm, Sweden
    • Linn\'e Flow Centre, Dept. Mechanics, KTH, Stockholm
  • Ugis Lacis

    • Linne Flow Centre, KTH Mechanics, 10044 Stockholm, Sweden
    • Linn\'e Flow Centre, Dept. Mechanics, KTH, Stockholm
  • Andrea Mazzino

    • DICCA, University of Genova, Italy
  • Hamid Kellay

    • Universite Bordeaux, France
  • Nicolas Brosse

    • Linn\'e Flow Centre, Dept. Mechanics, KTH, Stockholm
  • Fredrik Lundell

    • Linn\'e Flow Centre, Dept. Mechanics, KTH, Stockholm
  • Francois Ingremeau

    • Universite Bordeaux, France