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Mechanics and Control of Swimming: A Review

J. Edward Colgate, Kevin Lynch

Year
2004
Citations
429

Abstract

The bodies and brains of fish have evolved to achieve control objectives beyond the capabilities of current underwater vehicles. One route toward designing underwater vehicles with similar capabilities is to better understand fish physiological design and control strategies. This paper has two objectives: 1) to review clues to artificial swimmer design taken from fish physiology and 2) to formalize and review the control problems that must be solved by a robot fish. The goal is to exploit fish locomotion principles to address the truly difficult control challenges of station keeping under large perturbations, rapid maneuvering, power-efficient endurance swimming, and trajectory planning and tracking. The design and control of biomimetic swimming machines meeting these challenges will require state-of-the-art engineering and biology.

Keywords

ExploitFish <Actinopterygii>TrajectoryUnderwaterControl (management)RobotComputer scienceControl engineeringEngineeringArtificial intelligence

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