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Significance Fish and birds moving in groups are thought to benefit from hydrodynamic or aerodynamic interactions between individuals. To better understand these effects, we devise a robotic “school” of flapping swimmers whose formations and motions come about from flow interactions. Surprisingly, we find that the flows naturally generated during swimming can also prevent collisions and separations, allowing even uncoordinated individuals with different flapping motions to travel together. Other benefits include freeloading by a “lazy” follower who keeps up with a faster-flapping leader by surfing on its wake. More generally, our study provides complete maps linking flapping motions to group locomotion, which is needed to test whether flow interactions are also exploited by animals.more » « less
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