Why fish reduces its swimming seed?
Answers
Explanation:
It was billed as the event of the ages: Olympic swimming champion Michael Phelps in a timed race against a great white shark. The shark won, but the race was surprisingly close, thanks in part to a nifty artificial “monofin” worn on Phelps’ feet. The single fin was powered by both legs, and mimicked a fish or marine mammal. When it comes to speed underwater, a lot goes into the perfect fin.
To achieve efficient movement underwater, all fish must compromise between thrust and drag. Two major sources of drag are friction against the body, and form or pressure drag. A fish swims by moving its tail (caudal fin) side to side. While each motion provides thrust and lift, it also creates drag when the fin is angled to the side of the body as a stroke is completed.
It takes more than a fin to be fast.
Great white sharks are capable of short bursts of high speed, although they are not the fastest fish in the ocean. The fast fish, including the great white shark, billfish, and tuna, have several elements in common. They achieve the most thrust with least drag using a thin, tapering caudal fin shaped like a crescent moon, called a lunate tail (great-white tails are lunate, but thicker for more short-range power). More tail area gives more thrust, so fast fish have longer lobes on their fins.
But it takes more than a fin to be fast. The area where the body meets the tail is called the caudal peduncle. The caudal peduncle also moves side to side as a fish moves its fins. Fast species typically taper down toward the rear, culminating in a very narrow caudal peduncle. This shape minimizes drag while preserving space to hold the mighty muscles required to move so fast. The shape also allows minimizes recoil of the body as it moves, increasing efficiency.
As the fin moves side to side,
Two major sources of drag are friction against the body, and form or pressure drag. A fish swims by moving its tail (caudal fin) side to side. While each motion provides thrust and lift, it also creates drag when the fin is angled to the side of the body as a stroke is completed