Dynamics of ellipsoidal tracers in swimming algal suspensions
Ou Yang, Yi Peng, Zhengyang Liu, Chao Tang, Xinliang Xu, and Xiang, Cheng

TL;DR
This study reveals that the anisotropic diffusion of ellipsoidal tracers in active fluids can distinguish between pushers and pullers, providing new insights into active fluid dynamics and a practical detection method.
Contribution
We demonstrate that the rotational degrees of freedom of ellipsoids reveal fundamental differences between pushers and pullers, unlike spherical tracers.
Findings
Ellipsoids diffuse fastest along their major axis in pullers.
Ellipsoids diffuse slowest along their major axis in pushers.
Hydrodynamic models explain the opposite diffusion trends.
Abstract
Enhanced diffusion of passive tracers immersed in active fluids is a universal feature of active fluids and has been extensively studied in recent years. Similar to microrheology for equilibrium complex fluids, the unusual enhanced particle dynamics reveal intrinsic properties of active fluids. Nevertheless, previous studies have shown that the translational dynamics of spherical tracers are qualitatively similar, independent of whether active particles are pushers or pullers---the two fundamental classes of active fluids. Is it possible to distinguish pushers from pullers by simply imaging the dynamics of passive tracers? Here, we investigated the diffusion of isolated ellipsoids in algal C. reinhardtii suspensions---a model for puller-type active fluids. In combination with our previous results on pusher-type E. coli suspensions [Peng et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 068303 (2016)], we…
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