Self-Concentration and Large-Scale Coherence in Bacterial Dynamics
University of Arizona · Château Gombert · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Suspensions of aerobic bacteria often develop flows from the interplay of chemotaxis and buoyancy. We find in sessile drops that flows related to those in the Boycott effect of sedimentation carry bioconvective plumes down the slanted meniscus and concentrate cells at the drop edge, while in pendant drops such self-concentration occurs at the bottom. On scales much larger than a cell, concentrated regions in both geometries exhibit transient, reconstituting, high-speed jets straddled by vortex streets. A mechanism for large-scale coherence is proposed based on hydrodynamic interactions between swimming cells.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 23
Authors
5- CDChristopher DombrowskiCorresponding
University of Arizona
- LCLuis Cisneros
University of Arizona
- SCSunita Chatkaew
Château Gombert, University of Arizona, Institut de Recherche sur les Phénomènes Hors Équilibre
- RERaymond E. Goldstein
Applied Mathematics (United States), University of Arizona
- JOJohn O. Kessler
University of Arizona
Topics & keywords
- Buoyancy
- Drop (telecommunication)
- Mechanics
- Vortex
- Coherence (philosophical gambling strategy)
- Physics
- Sedimentation
- Vorticity