Abstract

Locomotion on granular inclines is a subject of high relevance in ecological physics as well as in biomimmetics and robotics. Enhancing stability on granular materials represents a huge challenge due to the fluidization transition when inclination approaches the avalanche angle. Our motivating example is the predator-prey system made of the antlion, its pit, and its prey. Recent studies have demonstrated that stability on granular inclines strongly depends on the pressure exerted on the substrate. In this work we show that for multilegged locomotion, along with pressure, the distance between the leg contacts on the substrate also plays a major role in the determination of the stability threshold. Through a set of model experiments using artificial sliders, we determine a critical distance below which stability is importantly affected by the interactions between the perturbed regions generated by each contact point. A simple model based on the Coulomb method of wedges allows us to estimate a stability criterion based on pressure, interleg distance, and substrate characteristics. Our work suggests that mass to leg-length allometric relationships, as the ones observed in ants, may be an important key in determining the locomotion success of multilegged locomotion on granular inclines.

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