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Those Speedy Dolphins... How???

Discussion in 'Technical Discussion' started by brian eiland, Jan 20, 2009.

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  1. brian eiland

    brian eiland Senior Member

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    “Gray’s Paradox” solved:

    Researchers discover secret of speedy dolphins
    New technology helps disprove 72-year-old scientific mystery

    There was something peculiar about dolphins that stumped prolific British zoologist Sir James Gray in 1936.

    He had observed the sea mammals swimming at a swift rate of more than 20 mph, but his studies had concluded that the muscles of dolphins simply weren’t strong enough to support those kinds of speeds. The conundrum came to be known as “Gray’s Paradox.”

    For decades the puzzle prompted much attention, speculation, and conjecture in the scientific community. But now, armed with cutting-edge flow measurement technology, researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have tackled the problem and conclusively solved Gray’s Paradox.

    “Sir Gray was certainly on to something, and it took nearly 75 years for technology to bring us to the point where we could get at the heart of his paradox,” said Timothy Wei, professor and acting dean of Rensselaer’s School of Engineering, who led the project. “But now, for the first time, I think we can safely say the puzzle is solved. The short answer is that dolphins are simply much stronger than Gray or many other people ever imagined.”

    Wei presented his findings November 24, 2008 at the 61st Annual Meeting of the American Physical Society (APS) Division of Fluid Dynamics in San Antonio, TX. Collaborators on the research included Frank Fish, a biologist at West Chester University in Pennsylvania; Terrie Williams, a marine biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz; Rensselaer undergraduate student Yae Eun Moon; and Rensselaer graduate students Erica Sherman and Paul Legac.

    After studying dolphins, Gray said in 1936 that they are not capable of producing enough thrust, or power-induced acceleration, to overcome the drag created as the mammal sped forward through the water. This drag should prevent dolphins from attaining significant speed, but simple observation proved otherwise — a paradox. In the absence of a sound explanation, Gray theorized that dolphin skin must have special drag-reducing properties.

    More than 70 years later, Wei has developed a tool that conclusively measures the force a dolphin generates with its tail.

    Wei created this new state-of-the-art water flow diagnostic technology by modifying and combining force measurement tools developed for aerospace research with a video-based flow measurement technique known as Digital Particle Image Velocimetry, which can capture up to 1,000 video frames per second.

    Wei videotaped two bottlenose dolphins, Primo and Puka, as they swam through a section of water populated with hundreds of thousands of tiny air bubbles. He then used sophisticated computer software to track the movement of the bubbles. The color-coded results show the speed and in what direction the water is flowing around and behind the dolphin, which allowed researchers to calculate precisely how much force the dolphin was producing.

    Wei also used this technique to film dolphins as they were doing tail-stands, a trick where the dolphins “walk” on water by holding most of their bodies vertical above the water while supporting themselves with short, powerful thrusts of their tails.

    The results show that dolphins produce on average about 200 lb of force when flapping their tail — about 10 times more force than Gray originally hypothesized.

    “It turns out that the answer to Gray’s Paradox had nothing to do with the dolphins’ skin,” Wei said. “Dolphins can certainly produce enough force to overcome drag. The scientific community has known this for a while, but this is the first time anyone has been able to actually quantitatively measure the force and say, for certain, the paradox is solved.”

    At peak performance, the dolphins produced between 300 and 400 lb of force. Human Olympic swimmers, by comparison, peak at about 60 to 70 lb of force, Wei said. He knows this for a fact because he has been working with U.S.A. Swimming over the past few years to use these same bubble-tracking DPIV and force-measuring techniques to better understand how elite swimmers interact with the water, and improve lap times.

    “It was actually a natural extension to go from swimmers to dolphins,” said Wei, whose research ranges from aeronautical and hydrodynamic flow of vehicles to more biological topics dealing with the flow of cells and fluid in the human body.

    The dolphins Wei filmed, Primo and Puka, are retired U.S. Navy dolphins who now live at the Long Marine Laboratory at UC Santa Cruz.

    Wei said the research team will likely continue to investigate the flow dynamics and force generation of other marine animals, which could yield new insight into how different species have evolved as a result of their swimming proficiency.

    “Maybe sea otters,” he said.

    Design Fax
    (Tech for OEM Design Engineers)
    http://www.manufacturingcenter.com/dfx/news/default_news.asp

    For more information on Wei’s work with Olympic swimmers, visit:
    http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2477


    A single frame (left) from a research video tracking the flow of water around Primo, a retired U.S. Navy bottlenose dolphin. The same frame (right), but with visualized information illustrating the water flow. The arrows indicate in which direction the water is moving, and the colors indicate the speed. The red and dark blue arrows signify the fastest-moving water. [Credit: Rensselaer/Tim Wei]

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  2. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    A dolphin does have very slippery skin. Any fish/mammal that can routinely jump 10' out of the water like they do at Sea World is pretty strong IMO. Humans are lucky if they can jump 5'. Whats even more amazing is that a Wahoo swims at nearly 70 mph.
  3. Fishtigua

    Fishtigua Senior Member

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    That's easy, Wahoo are surface-piercing like Arneson-drives, only the bottom half of the drive does the work. :D

    Fish
  4. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    Well then why don't they throw a huge roostertail behind them like the Arneson drives do? hehehe
  5. Bamboo

    Bamboo Senior Member

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    C'mon- even a Roosterfish can't throw a roostertail!:p
  6. Seafarer

    Seafarer Senior Member

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    Old joke about the smirking bottlenose...

    Q: What propels the dolphin forward?

    A: Its smug sense of self importance.
  7. Fishtigua

    Fishtigua Senior Member

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    What, you mean like lawyers? Or is that just greed?
  8. Capt Bill11

    Capt Bill11 Senior Member

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    The true surface drives of the fish world would have to be flying fish and ballyhoo. Check out their tail fin design. :D
  9. Fishtigua

    Fishtigua Senior Member

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    Ok so what the hell does the sail on a sailfish do?

    It can only mean extra drag, maybe a bit of grip in tight turns while feeding. What else?

    Fish
  10. Bamboo

    Bamboo Senior Member

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    Many animals have body parts that make them look larger than they are, and many fish use longer/larger fins to this use. They also use larger fins and body parts in attacking/corralling prey. Thresher sharks are a great example. The first primary rule of nature underwater is size equals power. The second primary rule of nature underwater is never get injured.
  11. Capt Bill11

    Capt Bill11 Senior Member

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    It's always been my understanding that their sail is used to help them ball bait during feeding.
  12. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    They don't use it to sail to Mexico when they get tired of swimming like a blowboater???
  13. Bamboo

    Bamboo Senior Member

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    Very true, but strange when you see bait and sailfish together- the bait "balls" up even if the sails do not raise so much. Fish interaction is a wonderous activity to watch. I was a diving guide and lived in Palau (and other islands of Micronesia) for many years and what I learned from direct observation of Predator/prey taught me as much or more about fish and fishing than being topside fishing from a boat or shore. Frankly it was awesomely stunning to see fish eat other fish. The "gray's paradox" was never a paradox to pacific islanders or those that spent time viewing and understanding underwater life.
  14. Capt Bill11

    Capt Bill11 Senior Member

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    One of my favorite things to do when diving is to take a rod down with me and watch the fish react to a lure. Very entertaining! :D
  15. Maria B

    Maria B New Member

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    Every yogi knows what power lies in a healthy muscular core..... the idea of how buff the dolphin core is "makes the ganglia twitch" awesome animals!
  16. SAB

    SAB New Member

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    This post got me thinking of all those Olympic full length swimsuits that are meant to make swimmers dolphin like with slippery skin. Anyway, I found an interesting read re drag of swimmers wearing suits at this link: http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=15835287
  17. kadesign

    kadesign New Member

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    Flapping wing propulsion

    It is not ready jet, but we will try is it possible to use dolphin tail motion like ship propulsion? :confused:

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  18. K1W1

    K1W1 Senior Member

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    Hi,

    You have been a member here for 4 yrs, surely by now you know what size the phtos can be at a maximum.
  19. YachtForums

    YachtForums Administrator

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    KaDesign,

    Innovation is always welcome, but please keep images under 640 pixels. I have adjusted the same.
  20. kadesign

    kadesign New Member

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    Sorry guys!