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Collective motion in a suspension of micro-swimmers that run-and-tumble and rotary diffuse

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dc.contributor.author Krishnamurthy, Deepak
dc.contributor.author Subramanian, Ganesh
dc.date.accessioned 2016-12-22T11:34:12Z
dc.date.available 2016-12-22T11:34:12Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.identifier.citation Journal of Fluid Mechanics en_US
dc.identifier.citation 781 en_US
dc.identifier.citation Krishnamurthy, D.; Subramanian, G., Collective motion in a suspension of micro-swimmers that run-and-tumble and rotary diffuse. Journal of Fluid Mechanics 2015, 781, 422-466. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0022-1120
dc.identifier.uri https://libjncir.jncasr.ac.in/xmlui/10572/1965
dc.description Restricted access en_US
dc.description.abstract Recent experiments have shown that suspensions of swimming micro-organisms are characterized by complex dynamics involving enhanced swimming speeds, large-scale correlated motions and enhanced diffusivities of embedded tracer particles. Understanding this dynamics is of fundamental interest and also has relevance to biological systems. The observed collective dynamics has been interpreted as the onset of a hydrodynamic instability, of the quiescent isotropic state of pushers, swimmers with extensile force dipoles, above a critical threshold proportional to the swimmer concentration. In this work, we develop a particle-based model to simulate a suspension of hydrodynamically interacting rod-like swimmers to estimate this threshold. Unlike earlier simulations, the velocity disturbance field due to each swimmer is specified in terms of the intrinsic swimmer stress alone, as per viscous slender-body theory. This allows for a computationally efficient kinematic simulation where the interaction law between swimmers is known a priori. The neglect of induced stresses is of secondary importance since the aforementioned instability arises solely due to the intrinsic swimmer force dipoles. Our kinematic simulations include, for the first time, intrinsic decorrelation mechanisms found in bacteria, such as tumbling and rotary diffusion. To begin with, we simulate so-called straight swimmers that lack intrinsic orientation decorrelation mechanisms, and a comparison with earlier results serves as a proof of principle. Next, we simulate suspensions of swimmers that tumble and undergo rotary diffusion, as a function of the swimmer number density (n), and the intrinsic decorrelation time (the average duration between tumbles, tau, for tumblers, and the inverse of the rotary diffusivity, D-r(-1), for rotary diffusers). The simulations, as a function of the decorrelation time, are carried out with hydrodynamic interactions (between swimmers) turned off and on, and for both pushers and pullers (swimmers with contractile force dipoles). The 'interactions-off' simulations allow for a validation based on analytical expressions for the tracer diffusivity in the stable regime, and reveal a non-trivial box size dependence that arises with varying strength of the hydrodynamic interactions. The 'interactions-on' simulations lead us to our main finding: the existence of a box-size-independent parameter that characterizes the onset of instability in a pusher suspension, and is given by nUL(2)tau for tumblers and nUL(2)/D-r for rotary diffusers; here, U and L are the swimming speed and swimmer length, respectively. The instability manifests as a bifurcation of the tracer diffusivity curves, in pusher and puller suspensions, for values of the above dimensionless parameters exceeding a critical threshold. en_US
dc.description.uri 1469-7645 en_US
dc.description.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2015.473 en_US
dc.language.iso English en_US
dc.publisher Cambridge University Press en_US
dc.rights ?Cambridge University Press, 2015 en_US
dc.subject Mechanics en_US
dc.subject Fluids & Plasmas Physics en_US
dc.subject biological fluid dynamics en_US
dc.subject instability en_US
dc.subject micro-organism dynamics en_US
dc.subject Swimming Model Microorganisms en_US
dc.subject Bacillus-Subtilis en_US
dc.subject Coherent Structures en_US
dc.subject Bacterial Dynamics en_US
dc.subject Stokesian Dynamics en_US
dc.subject Particle Tracking en_US
dc.subject Escherichia-Coli en_US
dc.subject Simulations en_US
dc.subject Sedimentation en_US
dc.subject Flow en_US
dc.title Collective motion in a suspension of micro-swimmers that run-and-tumble and rotary diffuse en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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