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Particular types of plankton in aquatic ecosystems can coordinate their motion depending on the local flow environment to reach regions conducive to their growth or reproduction. Investigating their swimming strategies with regard to the local environment is important to obtain in-depth understanding of their behavior in the aquatic environment. In the present research, to examine an impact of the shape and gravity on a swimming strategy, plankton is considered as settling swimming particles of ellipsoidal shape. The Q-learning approach is adopted to obtain swimming strategies for smart particles with a goal of efficiently moving upwards in a two-dimensional steady flow. Strategies obtained from reinforcement learning are compared to those of naive gyrotactic particles that is modeled considering the behavior of realistic plankton. It is found that elongation of particles improves the performance of upward swimming by facilitating particles resistance to the perturbation of vortex. In the case when the settling velocity is included, the strategy obtained by reinforcement learning has similar performance to that of the naive gyrotactic one, and they both align swimmers in upward direction. The similarity between the strategy obtained from machine learning and the biological gyrotactic strategy indicates the relationship between the aspherical shape and settling effect of realistic plankton and their gyrotactic feature.
We study the fluid dynamics of two fish-like bodies with synchronised swimming patterns. Our studies are based on two-dimensional simulations of viscous incompressible flows. We distinguish between motion patterns that are externally imposed on the s
In this fluid dynamics video, we demonstrate the microscale mixing enhancement of passive tracer particles in suspensions of swimming microalgae, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. These biflagellated, single-celled eukaryotes (10 micron diameter) swim with
We develop an adversarial-reinforcement learning scheme for microswimmers in statistically homogeneous and isotropic turbulent fluid flows, in both two (2D) and three dimensions (3D). We show that this scheme allows microswimmers to find non-trivial
We present the first time-resolved measurements of the oscillatory velocity field induced by swimming unicellular microorganisms. Confinement of the green alga C. reinhardtii in stabilized thin liquid films allows simultaneous tracking of cells and t
To evaluate the swimming performances of aquatic animals, an important dimensionless quantity is the Strouhal number, St = fA/U, with f the tail-beat frequency, A the peak-to-peak tail amplitude, and U the swimming velocity. Experiments with flapping