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In insect locomotion, the transmission of energy from muscles to motion is a process within which there are many sources of dissipation. One significant but understudied source is the structural damping within the insect exoskeleton itself: the thorax and limbs. Experimental evidence suggests that exoskeletal damping shows frequency (or rate) independence, but investigation into its nature and implications has been hampered by a lack methods for simulating the time-domain behaviour of this damping. Here, synergising and extending results across applied mathematics and seismic analysis, I provide these methods. Existing models of exoskeletal rate-independent damping are equivalent to an important singular integral in time: the Hilbert transform. However, these models are strongly noncausal, violating the directionality of time. I derive the unique causal analogue of these existing exoskeletal damping models, as well as an accessible approximation to them, as Hadamard finite-part integrals in time, and provide methods for simulating them. These methods are demonstrated on several current problems in insect biomechanics. Finally, I demonstrate, for the first time, that these rate-independent damping models show counterintuitive energetic properties - in certain cases, extending to violation of conservation of energy. This work resolves a key methodological impasse in the understanding of insect exoskeletal dynamics and offers new insights into the micro-structural origins of rate-independent damping as well as the directions required to resolve violations of causality and the conservation of energy in existing models.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.249940 | DOI Listing |
J Exp Biol
July 2025
Division of Fluid Dynamics, Department of Mechanics and Maritime Sciences, Chalmers University of Technology, 412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden.
In insect locomotion, the transmission of energy from muscles to motion is a process within which there are many sources of dissipation. One significant but understudied source is the structural damping within the insect exoskeleton itself: the thorax and limbs. Experimental evidence suggests that exoskeletal damping shows frequency (or rate) independence, but investigation into its nature and implications has been hampered by a lack methods for simulating the time-domain behaviour of this damping.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mech Behav Biomed Mater
February 2020
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Keio University, Yokohama, Japan; Department of Biological Science, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. Electronic address:
The mechanical properties of the plantar soft tissue are known to vary in diabetic patients, indicating that parameter identification of the mechanical properties of the foot tissue using an indentation test is clinically important for possible early diagnosis and interventions of diabetic foot. However, accurate mechanical characterization of the viscous properties of the plantar soft tissue has been difficult, as measured force-relaxation curves of the same soft tissue differ depending on how the material is loaded. In the present study, we attempted to clarify how the indentation rate of the plantar soft tissue affects the measured force-relaxation curves, which is necessary in order to identify the viscoelastic properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
March 1990
Biomechanics Group, Kalmár Laboratory of Cybernetics, József Attila University, Szeged, Hungary.
The mechanical impedance of the lungs (ZL) was measured in open-chest dogs with small-amplitude pseudorandom volume oscillations between 0.125 and 5 Hz, at mean transpulmonary pressures (Ptp) of 0.2, 0.
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