Abstract
The great hammerhead is denser than water, and hence relies on hydrodynamic lift to compensate for its lack of buoyancy, and on hydrodynamic moment to compensate for a possible misalignment between centres of mass and buoyancy. Because hydrodynamic forces scale with the swimming speed squared, whereas buoyancy and gravity are independent of it, there is a critical speed below which the shark cannot generate enough lift to counteract gravity, and there are anterior and posterior centre-of-mass limits beyond which the shark cannot generate enough pitching moment to counteract the buoyancy-gravity couple. The speed and centre-of-mass limits were found from numerous wind-tunnel experiments on a scaled model of the shark. In particular, it was shown that the margin between the anterior and posterior centre-of-mass limits is a few tenths of the product between the length of the shark and the ratio between its weight in and out of water; a diminutive 1% body length. The paper presents the wind-tunnel experiments, and discusses the roles that the cephalofoil and the pectoral and caudal fins play in longitudinal balance of a shark.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 200864 |
| Journal | Royal Society Open Science |
| Volume | 7 |
| Issue number | 10 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 1 Oct 2020 |
Keywords
- animal locomotion
- centre-of-mass limits
- great hammerhead
- heterocercal tail
- minimal swim speed
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- General
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