Soft-robotic green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) developed to replace animal experimentation provides new insight into their propulsive strategies

N van der Geest, L Garcia, F Borret, R Nates… - Scientific Reports, 2023 - nature.com
Green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) can swim up to 50 km per day while only consuming
seagrass or microalgae. How the animal accomplishes this vast journey on such low energy …

New Insights into Sea Turtle Propulsion and Their Cost of Transport Point to a Potential New Generation of High-Efficient Underwater Drones for Ocean Exploration

N van der Geest, L Garcia, R Nates… - Journal of Marine Science …, 2023 - mdpi.com
Sea turtles gracefully navigate their marine environments by flapping their pectoral flippers
in an elegant routine to produce the required hydrodynamic forces required for locomotion …

Employing Robotics for the Biomechanical Validation of a Prosthetic Flipper for Sea Turtles as a Substitute for Animal Clinical Trials

N van der Geest, L Garcia - Biomechanics, 2023 - mdpi.com
Sea turtles are a keystone species for the ocean's ecosystem, with all species currently
being listed as endangered. Such a threat is mainly due to human factors such as fishing net …

Unlocking the Aquatic Ballet of Sea Turtles: Harnessing Sea Turtle Biomechanics for the Evolution of Marine Technologies

N van der Geest - 2023 - openrepository.aut.ac.nz
Sea turtles are marvels of marine navigation, employing sophisticated biomechanical
strategies that enable them to traverse thousands of kilometres across oceans. Despite their …

АЛЬМАНАХ НАУЧНЫХ РАБОТ МОЛОДЫХ УЧЕНЫХ УНИВЕРСИТЕТА ИТМО

ЯЮ Жданов, ДВ ВАРЛАМОВА - elibrary.ru
АНТИКРИЗИСНОЕ УПРАВЛЕНИЕ БИЗНЕС-ПРОЦЕССАМИ В IT-КОМПАНИЯХ КОРЗИНА
ПОИСК НАВИГАТОР ЖУРНАЛЫ КНИГИ ПАТЕНТЫ ПОИСК АВТОРЫ ОРГАНИЗАЦИИ …