Event
Collective motion of confined biased swimmers: magnetotactic bacteria in channels and spheres
MathBio Seminar
Albane Thery from the University of Cambridge
Next Mathematical Biology Seminar of 2022 at 3pm next Tuesday (Jan. 11).
(Please note that this is NOT at the usual 4pm time slot, but at 3pm).
Our speaker is Albane Thery from the University of Cambridge, whose talk is titled
"Collective motion of confined biased swimmers: magnetotactic bacteria in channels and spheres".
Title:
Collective motion of confined biased swimmers: magnetotactic bacteria in channels and spheres.
Abstract:
Magnetotactic bacteria (MTBs) synthesize magnets in their cytoplasm and, as a result, align with external magnetic fields. The strains of MTBs we are interested in also self-propel by rotating their back flagella, and as a result swim preferentially along magnetic lines. We investigate what happens when we place dense suspensions of such swimmers in confined geometries under an external field. In a rectangular channel, we observe experimentally the emergence of plumes of bacteria at the scale of the confinement. This new collective motion can be modelled by considering the two opposite forces generated by the propulsion of each bacterium. In the sphere, on the other hand, previous experiments showed the formation of a global vortex with a preferred direction orthogonal to the magnetic field. This is the result of a series of symmetry breakings that can only be accounted for by combining gravity and swimmer chirality, as well as the flow from the force-based propulsion.
The talk will be held virtually, with the following zoom link:
https://upenn.zoom.us/j/93262943058?pwd=SFR0aS9zUHlzdXBnVzhKd1AycjB0Zz09
Meeting ID: 932 6294 3058
Passcode: 260667