As the whale turns: the shape of the humpback's flippers might hold the secret to more maneuverable submarines
© Natural History written by Adam Summers
The humpback whale, that mighty leviathan of the briny deep, hardly strikes one as a marvel of agility; on the contrary, it seems the very embodiment of stateliness and power. Each the size of a school bus, these awesome mammals cruise, mouths agape, so as to gather the tons of biomass they need to sate their appetites every day.
But the humpback gives the lie to the notion that things of great bulk move only by lumbering. After all, who hasn't seen, at least on film, the spectacle of a huge whale's great breach, its breathtaking leap from the water followed by a great returning splash? And underwater, the animals move with such astonishing agility that they've caught the attention of naval engineers, who hope that some of the principles learned from the study of the humpback's flippers can be applied to designing submersible vehicles of unprecedented maneuverability.
Megaptera novaeangliae, the humpback's scientific name, means "big-winged New Englander"--a nod to the pods of humpies living near the Stellwagen Banks of Massachusetts Bay, as well as to their very long flippers. Humpbacks, like other baleen whales, eat large amounts of small prey. But instead of simply swimming through aggregations of prey, as many of their cousins do, humpbacks often make "bubble nets'--narrow, cylindrical walls of bubbles--by exhaling while they swim in circles beneath their prey [see "Bubble Feast," by Erin Espelie, May 2003]. The bubble nets concentrate the prey, and so, when a whale then swims through the center of a bubble net, its payoff is a rich mouthful.
Bubble nets vary in size, depending on the kind of prey the whales are pursuing. When a humpback is corralling herring and other fishes, the net may be 150 feet wide. But when the humpbacks are rounding up krill--small, shrimpy crustaceans--the net may be as small as five feet across. That behavior raises an intriguing question: How can a thirty-five-foot-long animal swim in such tight circles?
The question has long fascinated the aptly named Frank E. Fish, a
biomechanist at West Chester University of Pennsylvania. Fish thought the
secret to the humpback's tight turning radius might be its flippers. The
humpback has the longest flippers of any whale, and they lie substantially
forward of the whale's center of mass, well placed to exert turning forces
on the whale. In fact, the two flippers look quite a bit like wings: each is
between nine and twelve feet long, about four times longer than its width,
and each has a rounded leading edge and a thin trailing edge. Most
intriguing, each flipper also has large bumps, called tubercles, that jut
out from its leading edge, giving the flipper a serrated appearance.
Over the years, biologists have suggested a number of possible functions for
the humpback's flippers. Some have seen them as large heat exchangers, or
prey attractors, or devices for making sound when slapped against the water.
Some have seen them as hydrofoils--water wings--that help the whale make its
turns. Oddly, the tubercles have not led to the same level of speculation.
Working with three engineers--David S. Mildosovic and Mark M. Murray, both
at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, and Laurens E. Howle of
Duke University in Durham, North Carolina--Fish set out to test his
hypothesis that the tubercles help the flipper hydrodynamically. For their
work, the four investigators relied on two scaled-down plastic replicas of a
humpback flipper, twenty-two inches long. One replica featured prominent
tubercles; the other had the same area and cross section, but a smooth
leading edge. Both models were then tested in a wind tunnel.
A wind tunnel might not seem to be the environment of choice for testing a
flipper that functions in water. Fortunately, though, results obtained with
airfoils in moving air can be "translated" into findings that pertain to
flippers moving in water. The key to the translation is known as the
Reynolds number, a kind of scaling factor that combines three sets of
numbers to summarize how an object interacts with a surrounding fluid. In
this case, the sets of numbers relevant to the Reynolds number are the
length and width of the wing, the density and viscosity of the surrounding
fluid, and the speed at which fluid and fin slide past each other.
As long as the Reynolds number is held constant, a one-hundredth scale model
of an airplane wing will act just like its full-scale version--and a scale
model of a flipper in a wind tunnel can become a stand-in for the real thing
in the ocean. That remarkable property is a huge convenience for engineers
and biomechanists, making it possible to study objects moving at practical
speeds simply by varying the viscosity of the surrounding fluid. In this
case, Miklosovic and Murray kept the Reynolds number for their scale models
appropriate to conditions in nature by running the air past the models
faster than the whales would move in seawater. Yet they were still able to
get a good idea of the effect of having bumps on the leading edge.
The body of a whale is relatively stiff, and so the animal cannot curve
sinuously into a turn the way a swimming seal can. To propel itself around a
corner, a whale instead relies on the lift generated by its flippers. Fish
and his colleagues found that the tubercles enable a flipper to continue
generating lift at angles of attack 40 percent steeper than are possible
with a smooth wing [see illustration above]. In other words, when a humpback
turns, it can roll farther onto its side without losing its "grip" on the
water, and so make a sharper turn, because of the tubercles.
But the tubercles would seem to solve one problem only to introduce another.
Protruding into the flow as they do, they would appear to increase the drag
of the flipper as the whale swings into a turn. Appearances can be
deceiving, though--particularly where drag is concerned. When the scalloped
flipper is held nearly horizontal in the flow, the drag is no different from
that of a smooth flipper, and at high angles of attack the drag is actually
lower. So, just when the whale is using its flipper to turn the tightest,
the flipper slides through water more easily than it would if it had a
smooth leading edge, even as it generates far more lift than a smooth
flipper could.
With their stiff bodies, whales are far better analogues for man-made
submersibles than more sinuous aquatic animals are. Fish and his colleagues
hope to design guidance fins for underwater vehicles that can give them some
of the agility that enables a thirty-ton animal to turn on a dime--or at
least a large doormat.
ADAM SUMMERS (asummers@uci.edu) is an assistant professor of ecology and
evolutionary biology at the University of California, Irvine.
© Natural History written by Adam Summers