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jueves, 8 de octubre de 2015

the National Science Foundation (NSF).- Clues to future of undersea exploration may reside inside a jellyfish-like creature.-Las pistas para el futuro de la exploración submarina pueden residir dentro de una criatura similar a las medusas

Hola amigos: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., hemos recibido información de la Fundación Nacional de Ciencias de Los Estados Unidos, que nos dicen que en un futuro las exploraciones submarinas, pueden residir dentro de una criatura similar a las medusas: Siphonophores,
Sifonóforos, se llaman: Los animales marinos que navegan espacio interior como submarinos mini-versiones de la nave espacial Enterprise.
La mayoría de los sifonóforos son largas y delgadas, flotadores transparentes. En 130 a 160 pies de largo, una especie es uno de los animales más largos del mundo.
More information............
 
http://www.nsf.gov/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=136509&WT.mc_id=USNSF_51&WT.mc_ev=click

Siphonophore holds secrets of oceanic "jet propulsion"
A siphonophore glides through the sea.
A siphonophore, an animal with colonies of propulsion jets, glides through the sea.
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October 7, 2015
Siphonophores, they're called: Marine animals that navigate inner space like undersea mini-versions of the starship Enterprise.
Most siphonophores are long, thin, transparent floaters. At 130 to 160 feet long, one species is among the longest animals in the world.
Although siphonophores appear to be single organisms, they are in fact colonies of many individual animals. Like crew members aboard the Enterprise, each colony has a role in guiding the "ship," in this case, largely in turning or forward-thrust.
Marine animals that swim via jet propulsion, such as jellyfish and squid, are fairly common in the sea. But it's rare to find a colony of animals that coordinates multiple jets for the movement of an entire individual, says marine biologist Jack Costello of Providence College.
Costello and colleagues recently published results of a study of one siphonophore's locomotion methods, a common species known as Nanomia bijuga, in the journal Nature Communications. Co-authors of the paper are Sean Colin of Roger Williams University, Brad Gemmell of the University of South Florida, John Dabiri of Stanford University, and Kelly Sutherland of the University of Oregon.
The researchers found that N. bijuga uses a sophisticated, multi-jet propulsion system that's based on a division of labor between younger and older members of the colony.
"These investigators have given us some of the first information about how this complex colonial organism coordinates its swimming activity," says David Garrison, program director in the National Science Foundation (NSF)'s Division of Ocean Sciences, which supported the research.
 
Nothing wasted
 
"This siphonophore is a highly efficient system in which no developmental stage is wasted," Costello says. The young members at the front of the colony use their smaller jets for turning and steering. The older, larger members farther back provide more powerful thrust as the colony moves from place to place.
"It's a sophisticated design in what would initially seem like a simple organism," Costello says.
N. bijuga belongs to a group of colonial animals called physonect siphonophores. They're related to jellyfish, anemones and corals. Voracious plankton-feeders, these siphonophores migrate to the ocean's surface at night to find prey, then return to darker depths by day to avoid predators such as fish.
 
The nectosome: the seat of power
 
The jet-propulsion members of a siphonophore colony, called nectophores, are genetically identical clones arranged in what's known as a nectosome. The nectosome is only a few inches long, but it tows much longer groups of reproductive and feeding units across distances that can reach 650 feet or more each day.
It's the equivalent, Costello says, of an adult human running a marathon every day, while towing the equivalent of its own body mass behind it.
To analyze N. bijuga's swimming abilities, Costello and colleagues measured particle flows around the siphonophore as it moved. The results revealed the size and thrust of individual jets.
The youngest ones, the researchers found, pushed the least amounts of water. However, because they're located at the tip of the nectosome, far from where it connects with the rest of the siphonophore's body, a directed force by these young members has an outsized effect on rotating the whole colony. "Just because the young ones are small, doesn't mean they aren't important," Costello says.
"These younger members have a long lever arm," he says. "They're like handles on doors. If you push a door near its hinges, the door is hard to open. But if you push on a door's handle, the door opens easily. A little force from a big lever arm has a big effect on turning, and so it is with this siphonophore."
The young colony members allow N. bijuga to rapidly alter course--and to completely reverse its swimming direction.
As new nectophores bud at the tip of the nectosome, older ones move farther back where their larger contractions are important for thrust.
"This set-up allows all members of the colony to help with the maneuvering that's critical for siphonophores as they find their way through the ocean," Costello says.
 
Siphonophores: the future of undersea exploration?
 
The pattern offers insights into the biomechanical success of siphonophores and provides "a basic understanding of a natural solution to multi-engine organization that may contribute to the expanding field of underwater-distributed propulsion vehicle design," write the scientists in their paper.
Costello imagines an undersea exploration vehicle that, like N. bijuga, twirls through the depths using elegantly placed thrusters that extend from front to back.
"We can perhaps peer into our own future in the sea," he says, "by studying how this seemingly simple animal jets from one part of the ocean to another relying on its youngest crew members."
As Captain Kirk observed from the Enterprise deck, "Galloping around the cosmos is a game for the young." Little did he know.
-- Cheryl Dybas, NSF (703) 292-7734 cdybas@nsf.gov
Investigators Sean Colin
John Dabiri
John Costello
Kelly Sutherland
Related Institutions/Organizations Providence College
Roger Williams University
University of Oregon Eugene
California Institute of Technology
Total Grants $1,035,123
Related WebsitesNSF Discovery: Jellyfish: Far From Passive Drifters-in-the-currents:
 http://www.nsf.gov/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=114748
siphonophore specimen
Scientists see possibilities for future undersea exploration in the secrets of a siphonophore.
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Two divers under water
Biologists are blue-water diving to study siphonophores and related marine life.
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Jack Costello and a colleague conduct research on siphonophores in the laboratory.
Jack Costello and colleagues conduct research on siphonophores in the laboratory.
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Marrus orthocanna, a physonect siphonophore
Marrus orthocanna, a physonect siphonophore, trails dozens of tentacles that snare prey.
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A siphonophore is coiled in mid-water depths, tentacles dangling
A siphonophore is coiled in mid-water depths, tentacles dangling to entangle unwary prey.
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the National Science Foundation (NSF)
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
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