Pages that link to "Item:Q4976665"
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The following pages link to A squirmer across Reynolds numbers (Q4976665):
Displaying 21 items.
- Swimming of a uniform deformable sphere in a viscous incompressible fluid with inertia (Q821169) (← links)
- Arbitrary axisymmetric steady streaming: flow, force and propulsion (Q1700572) (← links)
- Boundary behaviours of \textit{Leishmania mexicana}: a hydrodynamic simulation study (Q1717321) (← links)
- Second harmonic generation and vortex shedding by a dipole-quadrupole and a quadrupole-octupole swimmer in a viscous incompressible fluid (Q2001533) (← links)
- Motion of a model swimmer near a weakly deforming interface (Q4594087) (← links)
- Squirming motion in a Brinkman medium (Q4690212) (← links)
- Active swimmers interacting with stratified fluids during collective vertical migration (Q4971793) (← links)
- Inertial torque on a squirmer (Q5058250) (← links)
- Hydrodynamics of an inertial active droplet (Q5131340) (← links)
- Motion of an inertial squirmer in a density stratified fluid (Q5131421) (← links)
- The effect of particle geometry on squirming through a shear-thinning fluid (Q5863433) (← links)
- Dynamics of forced and unforced autophoretic particles (Q5868003) (← links)
- Cargo carrying with an inertial squirmer in a Newtonian fluid (Q5883462) (← links)
- Two-dimensional study on the motion and interactions of squirmers under gravity in a vertical channel (Q5889515) (← links)
- Hydrodynamic force on a small squirmer moving with a time-dependent velocity at small Reynolds numbers (Q6051236) (← links)
- Spontaneous locomotion of a symmetric squirmer (Q6127243) (← links)
- Influence of heterogeneity or shape on the locomotion of a caged squirmer (Q6132666) (← links)
- Swimming of an inertial squirmer and squirmer dumbbell through a viscoelastic fluid (Q6137628) (← links)
- Nonlinear electrophoretic velocity of a spherical colloidal particle (Q6166728) (← links)
- Slippery rheotaxis: new regimes for guiding wall-bound microswimmers (Q6173663) (← links)
- Stick-slip squirmers: slip asymmetry can qualitatively change self-swimming characteristics of squirmers (Q6176538) (← links)