The hydrodynamics of swimming microorganisms
University of California, San Diego · Brown University
Abstract
Cell motility in viscous fluids is ubiquitous and affects many biological processes, including reproduction, infection and the marine life ecosystem. Here we review the biophysical and mechanical principles of locomotion at the small scales relevant to cell swimming, tens of micrometers and below. At this scale, inertia is unimportant and the Reynolds number is small. Our emphasis is on the simple physical picture and fundamental flow physics phenomena in this regime. We first give a brief overview of the mechanisms for swimming motility, and of the basic properties of flows at low Reynolds number, paying special attention to aspects most relevant for swimming such as resistance matrices for solid bodies, flow…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 71.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 370
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Physics
- Reynolds number
- Active matter
- Kinematics
- Inertia
- Scale (ratio)
- Mechanics
- Flow (mathematics)
- Life below water