(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, May 6, 2025 – From bird flocking to fish schooling, many biological systems exhibit some type of collective motion, often to improve performance and conserve energy. Compared to other swimmers, manta rays are particularly efficient, and their large aspect ratio is useful for creating large lift compared to drag. These properties make their collective motion especially relevant to complex underwater operations.
To understand how their group dynamics affect their propulsion, researchers from Northwestern Polytechnical University (NPU) and the Ningbo Institute of NPU, in China, modeled the motions of groups of manta rays, which they present in Physics of Fluids, by AIP Publishing.
“As underwater operation tasks become more complex and often require multiple underwater vehicles to carry out group operations, it is necessary to take inspiration from the group swimming of organisms to guide formations of underwater vehicles,” said author Pengcheng Gao. “Both the shape of manta rays and their propulsive performance are of great value for biomimicry.”
Based on photographs of real manta ray configurations, the researchers studied different formations of three manta rays: in tandem, in a triangular setup with one manta ray in front leading two behind, and in an inverse triangular configuration with one manta ray trailing the other two.
They found the tandem formation only significantly increases propulsion for the middle manta ray, whose performance directly determines the performance of the entire group. The two triangular setups both result in overall decreased efficiency compared to a single swimmer on its own. These findings can help optimize formations for underwater vehicle operations.
“The tandem formation and the triangular formation are the formations that manta rays often use during group swimming,” said Gao. “This biological information also supports the idea that a small group of three individuals can be used as a basic unit for more complex group swimming.”
In nature, manta rays swim in numbers ranging from pairs all the way up to swarms of thousands. However, previous studies have only considered manta rays in pairs or on their own. Because Gao and the team expanded the study into a unit of three, their findings can be extended into a larger number of swimmers by considering larger groups to be composites of those modeled in the paper.
“Future research should focus on the performance of group swimming under the coupling of multiple factors, such as formations, spacing, and motion differences, in addition to considering the combination of deep learning algorithms to achieve active control of the motion parameters of the individual in the group,” said Gao.
###
The article “Formation effects on the group propulsion performance of manta rays” is authored by Pengcheng Gao, Qiaogao Huang, Guang Pan, Yong Chu, and Jingyi Bai. It will appear in Physics of Fluids on May 6, 2025 (DOI: 10.1063/5.0270287). After that date, it can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0270287.
ABOUT THE JOURNAL
Physics of Fluids is devoted to the publication of original theoretical, computational, and experimental contributions to the dynamics of gases, liquids, and complex fluids. See https://pubs.aip.org/aip/pof.
###
END
Do manta rays benefit from collective motion?
Studying how group dynamics affect manta rays’ propulsion can help inform underwater vehicle operations
2025-05-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Differences in abortion use by sexual orientation in 3 national cohorts
2025-05-06
About The Study: In this study using data from retrospectively reported pregnancies from 3 longitudinal cohorts, all sexual minority groups had increased abortion use compared with completely heterosexual participants, and abortion use was heterogeneous; given the higher use of abortion among sexual minority populations, they are more likely to be disproportionately impacted by the narrowing of abortion access in the U.S. after the Supreme Court Dobbs decision. Future research is needed to understand the pathways that contribute to the unique abortion care needs of sexual minority ...
Conversion therapy exposure and elevated cardiovascular disease risk
2025-05-06
About The Study: In this cohort study of sexual and gender minority (SGM) young adults assigned male at birth, exposure to sexual orientation and gender identity change efforts (SOGICE) was associated with adverse cardiovascular health indicators, including elevated diastolic blood pressure and systolic blood pressure, increased systemic inflammation, and higher odds of self-reported hypertension or high blood pressure. These findings underscore the need for public health and policy interventions to enforce ...
Most people say they want to know their risk for Alzheimer’s dementia, fewer follow through
2025-05-06
As researchers make progress in understanding how Alzheimer’s disease develops, there are growing opportunities for healthy research participants to learn their risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease dementia in the future. While many organizations often advocate for investigators to share risk estimates with individual participants, there are ethical concerns around doing so, given that there are no medical interventions to change that risk.
A new study from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis examines the choices such healthy research volunteers make ...
New chronic pain therapy retrains the brain to process emotions
2025-05-06
A new study led by UNSW Sydney and Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) shows that targeting emotional processing is key to treating and managing chronic pain.
The study is based on a randomised controlled trial led by Professor Sylvia Gustin and Dr Nell Norman-Nott, both from UNSW and NeuRA. Along with a team at NeuRA’s Centre for Pain IMPACT, they published their results today in JAMA Network Open.
The trial showed that enhancing the brain’s capacity for emotional processing through therapeutic intervention is an effective approach to managing chronic pain.
“By changing how we manage emotions, it is possible to change the experience of pain itself,” Prof. ...
Fisetin, a natural compound, helps prevent artery hardening from aging and kidney disease
2025-05-06
“Fisetin treatment suppressed calcific marker expression and calcification of VSMCs as well as p38 MAPK phosphorylation induced by pro-calcific conditions.”
BUFFALO, NY — May 6, 2025 — A new research paper was published in Aging (Aging-US) Volume 17, Issue 4, on April 2, 2025, titled “Fisetin ameliorates vascular smooth muscle cell calcification via DUSP1-dependent p38 MAPK inhibition.”
In this study, researchers at Johannes Kepler University Linz found that fisetin, a natural substance found in fruits and vegetables, helps protect blood vessels from hardening, which is a common problem ...
JMIR Biomedical Engineering invites submissions on AI Applications in Biomedical Engineering
2025-05-06
(Toronto, May 6, 2025) JMIR Publications invites submissions to a new theme issue titled “AI Applications in Biomedical Engineering” in its open access journal JMIR Biomedical Engineering. The premier, peer-reviewed journal is indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, Scopus, DOAJ, Sherpa/Romeo, and EBSCO/EBSCO Essentials.
AI is rapidly advancing biomedical engineering, with the potential to contribute to medical device development, personalized diagnostics or treatment, patient outcome prediction, or drug discovery. Specifically, AI in biomedical ...
Low blood sugar contributes to eye damage and vision loss in diabetic retinopathy; experimental drug may help treat condition
2025-05-06
In a new National Institutes of Health-funded study led by scientists at the Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they have determined that low blood sugar, or hypoglycemia, may promote a breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier, an important boundary that regulates the flow of nutrients, waste and water in and out of the retina.
The research, which investigated the phenomenon in diabetic mice, provides insights into the origin of diabetic retinopathy, specifically in patients with episodes of hypoglycemia. Diabetic retinopathy, a severe complication of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes, can cause permanent vision damage ...
Fruit and microbes boost biogas production and fermentation
2025-05-06
Highlights:
Fermenting organic matter can produce biogas, which includes methane, and suggests a sustainable alternative to fossil fuels.
Alfalfa, often used as feed, produces biogas after fermentation.
Adding fruit waste and Lactobacillus acidophilus to alfalfa boosts biogas production and improves fermentation, according to a new study.
The process points to a useful way to dispose of fruit waste, produce energy and enhance agricultural feed.
Washington, D.C.—Alfalfa is more than a protein-rich feed for livestock; it may also be an excellent source of biogas. This mixture of methane and other gases is produced when plants (or ...
Cutting greenhouse gases will reduce number of deaths from poor air quality
2025-05-06
Up to 250,000 deaths from poor air quality could be prevented annually in central and western Europe by 2050 if greenhouse gas emissions are drastically reduced, say researchers.
A study by atmospheric scientists at the University of Leeds has revealed that the number of deaths could be significantly reduced, but only if there is a strong focus on reducing greenhouse gases and air pollutants.
As well as finding that strong climate mitigation would result in large reductions in air quality mortality, the team has also discovered that it reduces the inequitable burden of air quality mortality in more deprived parts of Europe. Their findings are published today (6 May) in the journal Earth’s ...
Total and minimum energy efficiency tradeoff in robust multigroup multicast satellite communications
2025-05-06
Satellite communication is an indispensable part of sixth generation of mobile communication systems (6G) given its global coverage and long-distance propagation. Energy consumption and channel acquisition are two critical issues in satellite communication systems. On the one hand, with the rapidly increasing energy wastage in wireless systems, green communication technology has attracted extensive attentions and energy efficiency (EE) becomes the key performance indicator in the transmission scheme design of satellite communications. On the other hand, channel state information (CSI) is well required in designing the beamforming, but it is infeasible for gateway ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Slickrock: USU geologists explore why Utah's Wasatch Fault is vulnerable to earthquakes
„Looking Through Objects. Women in Contemporary Polish Design” – exhibition at Design Museum Brussels
NCCN Policy Summit builds bridges between primary care and oncology for better cancer outcomes
Physician-led online nutrition intervention program is practical, cost-effective, and successful at improving patient health
Long COVID may cause long-term changes in the heart and lungs and may lead to cardiac and pulmonary diseases
Albert Einstein College of Medicine launches Data Science Institute
Half of U.S. adults acknowledge health benefits of eating a plant-based diet
Food as medicine: How diet shapes gut microbiome health
Bridging Worlds: USU physicists develop novel test of the Holographic Principle
Silver nanoparticles produced by fungus could be used to prevent and treat COVID-19
Subtle edits yield big results in microbes
Scientists discover a new way to convert corn waste into low-cost sugar for biofuel
Study shows significant increase in mental health diagnoses among publicly insured children
Development, agriculture present risks for drinking water quality
New CDC nPEP Guidelines should become ‘part of general medical practice’
Would a musical triangle of any other shape sound as sweet?
Do manta rays benefit from collective motion?
Differences in abortion use by sexual orientation in 3 national cohorts
Conversion therapy exposure and elevated cardiovascular disease risk
Most people say they want to know their risk for Alzheimer’s dementia, fewer follow through
New chronic pain therapy retrains the brain to process emotions
Fisetin, a natural compound, helps prevent artery hardening from aging and kidney disease
JMIR Biomedical Engineering invites submissions on AI Applications in Biomedical Engineering
Low blood sugar contributes to eye damage and vision loss in diabetic retinopathy; experimental drug may help treat condition
Fruit and microbes boost biogas production and fermentation
Cutting greenhouse gases will reduce number of deaths from poor air quality
Total and minimum energy efficiency tradeoff in robust multigroup multicast satellite communications
Parent coaching sparks major communication growth in infants with social and communication delays
Duke University Press to publish open access monographs through MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O)
Review: Social drinking also a well-worn path to alcohol use disorder
[Press-News.org] Do manta rays benefit from collective motion?Studying how group dynamics affect manta rays’ propulsion can help inform underwater vehicle operations