A spherical squirming swimmer in unsteady Stokes flow
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5417351
DOI10.1017/jfm.2013.131zbMath1287.76254OpenAlexW2157082592MaRDI QIDQ5417351
Publication date: 21 May 2014
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2013.131
Stokes and related (Oseen, etc.) flows (76D07) Biomechanics (92C10) Biopropulsion in water and in air (76Z10)
Related Items
Computational analysis of amoeboid swimming at low Reynolds number, BIOLOGICAL FLUID MECHANICS UNDER THE MICROSCOPE: A TRIBUTE TO JOHN BLAKE, Unsteady chiral swimmer and its response to a chemical gradient, Hydrodynamic force on a small squirmer moving with a time-dependent velocity at small Reynolds numbers, Arbitrary axisymmetric steady streaming: flow, force and propulsion, Second harmonic generation and vortex shedding by a dipole-quadrupole and a quadrupole-octupole swimmer in a viscous incompressible fluid, Passively parallel regularized stokeslets, Measurements of the unsteady flow field around beating cilia
Cites Work
- Mathematical model for unsteady ciliary propulsion
- Hydrodynamic interactions in squirmer motion: swimming with a neighbour and close to a wall
- Motion of slender bodies in unsteady Stokes flow
- Hydrodynamics of self-propulsion near a boundary: predictions and accuracy of far-field approximations
- Unsteady swimming of small organisms
- A singularity method for unsteady linearized flow
- Stirring by squirmers
- Hydrodynamic interaction of two swimming model micro-organisms
- Surprising behaviors in flapping locomotion with passive pitching
- Geometry of self-propulsion at low Reynolds number
- Efficiencies of self-propulsion at low Reynolds number
- Mechanics of Swimming and Flying
- Flagellar Hydrodynamics
- Symmetry breaking leads to forward flapping flight
- Transition from ciliary to flapping mode in a swimming mollusc: flapping flight as a bifurcation in ${\hbox{\it Re}}_\omega$
- A Coordinate-Based Proof of the Scallop Theorem
- Continuous breakdown of Purcell’s scallop theorem with inertia
- A spherical envelope approach to ciliary propulsion
- Average nutrient uptake by a self-propelled unsteady squirmer
- On unidirectional flight of a free flapping wing
- Analysis of the swimming of microscopic organisms
- On the squirming motion of nearly spherical deformable bodies through liquids at very small reynolds numbers