The long-time dynamics of two hydrodynamically-coupled swimming cells
Sebastien Michelin, Eric Lauga

TL;DR
This paper analytically investigates the long-time hydrodynamic interactions of two confined swimming cells, revealing their possible attraction or repulsion behaviors and unstable equilibrium states.
Contribution
It provides a rigorous analytical model for the long-time dynamics of two hydrodynamically-coupled swimming cells with confined trajectories, a case previously difficult to analyze.
Findings
Cells tend to either attract or repel each other over time.
All equilibrium states identified are unstable.
Long-term behavior is characterized by either attraction or repulsion, confirmed numerically.
Abstract
Swimming micro-organisms such as bacteria or spermatozoa are typically found in dense suspensions, and exhibit collective modes of locomotion qualitatively different from that displayed by isolated cells. In the dilute limit where fluid-mediated interactions can be treated rigorously, the long-time hydrodynamics of a collection of cells result from interactions with many other cells, and as such typically eludes an analytical approach. Here we consider the only case where such problem can be treated rigorously analytically, namely when the cells have spatially confined trajectories, such as the spermatozoa of some marine invertebrates. We consider two spherical cells swimming, when isolated, with arbitrary circular trajectories, and derive the long-time kinematics of their relative locomotion. We show that in the dilute limit where the cells are much further away than their size, and…
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