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5 Life in a Fluid Medium

5 Life in a Fluid Medium. Notes for Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology By Jeffrey S. Levinton. Some Important Properties of Fluids Density :  units of g cm -3 Dynamic viscosity :  molecular stickiness, units of (force x time)/area

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5 Life in a Fluid Medium

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  1. 5Life in a Fluid Medium Notes for Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology By Jeffrey S. Levinton

  2. Some Important Properties of Fluids Density:  units of g cm-3 Dynamic viscosity:  molecular stickiness, units of (force x time)/area Kinematic Viscosity: gooeyness or how easily it flows, how likely is to break out in a rash of vortices, units of (length2/time) Kinematic viscosity = dynamic viscosity/density

  3. Properties of Some Common Fluids

  4. Reynolds Number, Re: measure of relative importance of viscous and inertial forces in fluid, dimensionless If Seawater is used, then Re increases with increasing velocity and size

  5. Estimating the value of l (size) and V (velocity)

  6. Reynolds numbers for a range of swimming organisms and sperm

  7. Reynolds Number, Re: measure of relative importance of viscous and inertial forces in fluid, dimensionless If Seawater is used, then Re increases with increasing velocity and size

  8. Reynolds number implications • Re > 1000 : inertial forces predominate • Re < 1 : viscous forces predominate • Conclude that objects exist under very different conditions in the same seawater, depending on their size and velocity

  9. Reynolds number implications • Re > 1000 : inertial forces predominate • Re < 1 : viscous forces predominate • If you are very small, you are living in a viscous medium, and the moment you stop working to move you will stop • If you are large and can generate a fairly high velocity you can propel yourself and you will have inertia and you will “coast” • Some organisms can live under both conditions. For example a copepod feeding moves very slowly and lives at very low Re, but a copepod swimming to escape from a predator generates thrust with its swimming appendages and operates under higher Re, and has inertia

  10. Reynolds Number, Re: measure of relative importance of viscous and inertial forces in fluid, dimensionless WHAT IF VISCOSITY MATTERS?? KINEMATIC VISCOSITY DECREASES WITH INCREASING TEMPERATURE

  11. Herring larva - Clupea harengus

  12. Temperature range of 5-15°C - kinematic viscosity decreases 45%! Low temperature: viscosity dominates High temperature: inertia dominates Cool experiment: place material in water that increases kinematic viscosity: small larvae reduce amplitude of tail beating! Effect only important in cool waters, not in warmer waters where change of temperature has much less effect on k. viscosity WEIRD OUTCOME: IT COSTS LESS TO SWIM AT THE HIGHER TEMPERATURE!!! von Herbing 2002 Journal of Fish Biology 61: 865-876.

  13. Change in kinematic viscosity: note that viscosity decreases substantially with increasing temperature, which allows easier swimming After von Herbing 2002 Journal of Fish Biology 61: 865-876.

  14. Metabolic cost of swimming for cod larvae Gadus morhua decreases from 5 to 10 degrees C after von Herbing 2002 Journal of Fish Biology 61: 865-876.

  15. Properties of Flow, Pressure Streamline Cylinder (in cross section) Particles entrained in flow move with streamlines and do not cross

  16. Laminar Versus Turbulent Flow • Laminar flow - streamlines are all parallel, flow is very regular • Turbulent flow - streamlines irregular to chaotic • In a pipe, laminar flow changes to turbulent flow when pipe diameter increases, velocity increases, or fluid density increases beyond a certain point, i.e., when Re increases

  17. Laminar versus turbulent flow

  18. Water Moving Over a Surface • Well above the surface the water will flow at a “mainstream” velocity • But, at the surface, the velocity will be zero; This is known as the no-slip condition

  19. In boundary layer, water velocity is <99% of mainstream velocity.

  20. Principle of Continuity • Assume fluid is incompressible and moving through a pipe

  21. Principle of Continuity 2 • Assume fluid is incompressible and moving through a pipe • What comes in must go out!

  22. Principle of Continuity 3 • Assume fluid is incompressible and moving through a pipe • What comes in must go out! • Velocity of fluid through pipe is inversely proportional to cross section of pipe

  23. Principle of Continuity 4 • Assume fluid is incompressible and moving through a pipe • What comes in must go out! • Velocity of fluid through pipe is inversely proportional to cross section of pipe • Example: If diameter of pipe is doubled, velocity of fluid will be reduced by half

  24. Principle of Continuity 5 • Assume fluid is incompressible and moving through a pipe • What comes in must go out! • Velocity of fluid through pipe is inversely proportional to cross section of pipe • Example: If diameter of pipe is doubled, velocity of fluid will be reduced by half • Principle applies to a single pipe, but it also applies to the case where a pipe splits into several equal subsections. Product of velocity and cross sectional area = sum of products of all the velocity and sum of cross-sectional areas of smaller pipes

  25. Principle of continuity

  26. Continuity, Applied to Sponge Pumping • Sponges consist of networks of chambers, lined with cells called choanocytes • Velocity of exit current can be 1-2 cm/s (10,000-20,000 µm per sec) • But, velocity generated by choanocytes is 50 µm per sec. How do they generate such a high exit velocity? • Ratio of velocity at exit to choanocytes ~ 200-400 • Answer is in cross-sectional area of choanocytes, whose total cross-sectional area are thousands of times greater than the cross section of the exit current areas.

  27. Flagellated chamber Exit current Choanocytes The low velocity of the water from flagellated choanocyte cells in flagellated chambers is compensated by the far greater total cross-sectional area of the flagellated chambers, relative to the exit current opening of the sponge

  28. Bernoulli’s Principle • Pressure varies inversely with the velocity of the fluid Upper air stream Wing moving Lower air stream

  29. Bernoulli’s Principle 2 • Pressure varies inversely with the velocity of the fluid • Means that pressure gradients can be generated by different velocities in different areas on a surface Upper air stream Wing moving Lower air stream

  30. Bernoulli’s Principle 3 • Pressure varies inversely with the velocity of the fluid • Means that pressure gradients can be generated by different velocities in different areas on a surface • Example: Top surface of a wing has stronger curvature than bottom of wing, air travels faster on top, pressure is lower, which generates lift Upper air stream Wing moving Lower air stream

  31. Bernoulli’s Principle: Top: Difference below and above flatfish creates lift. Bottom: Raised burrow entrance on right places it in faster flow, which creates pressure gradient and flow through burrow.

  32. Pressure Drag • Water moving past an object creates drag: pressure difference up and downstream of object • At high Reynolds number, the pressure difference up- and downstream explains the pressure drag. Streamlining and placing the long axis of a structure parallel to the flow will both reduce pressure drag • At low Reynolds number, the interaction of the surface with the flow creates skin friction.

  33. Drag and fish form. The fish on left is streamlined and creates relatively little pressure drag while swimming. The fish on right is more disk shaped and vortices are created behind the fish, which creates a pressure difference and, therefore, increased pressure drag; this disk shape, however, allows the fish to rapidly turn

  34. Sessile Forms - How to Reduce Drag? Problem: You are attached to the bottom and sticking into the current Drag tends to push you down stream - you might snap! Examples : Seaweeds, corals Solutions: Flexibility - bend over in current Grow into current 3. Strengthen body (some seaweeds have cross weaving)

  35. Reducing drag by pointing branches into current

  36. Blue crab: Callinectes sapidus Side orientation reduces drag

  37. Behavioral reduction of drag - withdrawal of tentacle crown in anemone

  38. The End

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