Meso-scale turbulence in living fluids

ORAL

Abstract

The mathematical characterization of turbulence phenomena in active non-equilibrium fluids proves even more difficult than for conventional liquids or gases. It is not known which features of turbulent phases in living matter are universal or system-specific, or which generalizations of the Navier-Stokes equations are able to describe them adequately. We combine experiments, particle simulations, and continuum theory to identify the statistical properties of self-sustained meso-scale turbulence in active systems. To study how dimensionality and boundary conditions affect collective bacterial dynamics, we measured energy spectra and structure functions in dense Bacillus subtilis suspensions in quasi-2D and 3D geometries. Our experimental results for the bacterial flow statistics agree well with predictions from a minimal model for self-propelled rods, suggesting that at high concentrations the collective motion of the bacteria is dominated by short-range interactions. To provide a basis for future theoretical studies, we propose a minimal continuum model for incompressible bacterial flow. A detailed numerical analysis of the 2D case shows that this theory can reproduce many of the experimentally observed features of self-sustained active turbulence.

*Supported by the ERC, EPSRC and DFG

Authors

  • Jorn Dunkel

    • DAMTP, University of Cambridge
  • Rik Wensink

    • CNRS, Universite Paris-Sud 11
  • Sebastian Heidenreich

    • Physikalisch Technische Bundesanstalt Berlin
  • Knut Drescher

    • Princeton University
  • Ray Goldstein

    • DAMTP, University of Cambridge
  • Hartmut Loewen

    • Heinrich Heine Universitat Duesseldorf
  • Julia Yeomans

    • University of Oxford