Nils B. Tack
Papers
2
Total Citations
5
H-Index
2
About
Nils B. Tack is a biomechanics researcher whose work illuminates the physical principles underlying how small aquatic animals move. His primary research focus is on metachronal swimming—the sequential, wave-like beating of closely spaced appendages used by many abundant aquatic invertebrates. Tack’s major contribution lies in dissecting the biophysical mechanisms that make this locomotion so effective, particularly the roles of appendage spatial asymmetry, phase coordination, and leg coalescence. His most cited paper, "Going around the bend to understand the role of leg coalescence in metachronal swimming" (2025), has already garnered 3 citations, with a closely related 2024 version adding 2 more. By experimentally and theoretically exploring how flexible appendages bend and coalesce during swimming, Tack provides fundamental insights into the fluid dynamics of rowing and paddling at small scales. His work bridges engineering and biology, offering inspiration for bio-inspired robotic swimmers. Though early in his career, Tack’s focused, mechanistic approach is establishing him as a rising voice in comparative biomechanics, helping decode nature’s elegant solutions for efficient aquatic propulsion.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
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