senooken JP Social
  • FAQ
  • Login
senooken JP Socialはsenookenの専用分散SNSです。
  • Public

    • Public
    • Network
    • Groups
    • Popular
    • People

Conversation

Notices

  1. ぜま​:kurage_blue:​クラゲ丼鯖缶 (yi0713@kurage.cc@kurage.cc)'s status on Sunday, 28-Oct-2018 17:41:30 JST ぜま​:kurage_blue:​クラゲ丼鯖缶 ぜま​:kurage_blue:​クラゲ丼鯖缶

    【論文】ジェットで漕ぐクラゲ: 根口クラゲ Catostylus mosaicus(カラージェリー) における遊泳性能 Jet-paddling jellies: swimming performance in the Rhizostomeae jellyfish Catostylus mosaicus (Quoy and Gaimard, 1824)
    http://jeb.biologists.org/content/early/2018/10/19/jeb.191148
    カラージェリーが傘の収縮と弛緩の繰り返しによってどのように推進力を得ているのかを分析した英国の研究。

    In conversation Sunday, 28-Oct-2018 17:41:30 JST from kurage.cc permalink

    Attachments

    1. No result found on File_thumbnail lookup.
      Jet-paddling jellies: swimming performance in the Rhizostomeae jellyfish Catostylus mosaicus (Quoy and Gaimard, 1824)
      from Journal of Experimental Biology
      Jellyfish are a successful and diverse class of animals that swim via jet propulsion, with swimming performance and propulsive efficiency being related to the animal's feeding ecology and body morphology. The Rhizostomeae jellyfish lack tentacles but possess four oral lobes and eight trailing arms at the centre of their bell, giving them a body morphology quite unlike that of other free-swimming medusae. The implications of this body morphology on the mechanisms by which thrust is produced are unknown. Here we determined the wake structure and propulsive efficiency in the blue-blubber jellyfish Catostylus mosaicus ; order Rhizostomeae). The animal is propelled during both bell contraction and bell relaxation by different thrust generating mechanisms. During bell contraction, a jet of fluid is expelled from the subumbrellar cavity, which results from the interaction between the counter-rotating stopping (from the preceding contraction cycle) and starting vortices, creating a vortex superstructure and propulsion. This species is also able to utilize passive energy recapture, that increases the animal's swimming velocity towards the end of the bell expansion phase when the bell diameter is constant. The thrust produced during this phase is the result of the flexible bell margin manoeuvring the stopping vortex into the subumbrellar cavity during bell relaxation, enhancing its circulation, and creating a region of high pressure on the inner surface of the bell and, consequently, thrust. These mechanisms of thrust generation result in C. mosaicus having a relatively high propulsive efficiency compared to other swimmers, indicating that economical locomotion could be a contributing factor in the ecological success of these medusan swimmers.

    Feeds

    • Activity Streams
    • RSS 2.0
    • Atom
    • Help
    • About
    • FAQ
    • TOS
    • Privacy
    • Source
    • Version
    • Contact

    senooken JP Social is a social network, courtesy of senooken. It runs on GNU social, version 2.0.2-beta0, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.

    Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 All senooken JP Social content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.