Viscoelastic control of spatiotemporal order in bacterial active matter
Song Liu, Suraj Shankar, M. Cristina Marchetti, Yilin Wu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how adjusting the viscoelasticity of the fluid surrounding bacteria can control their collective spatial and temporal organization, creating tunable self-oscillating vortices.
Contribution
It introduces a simple method to simultaneously control spatial and temporal order in bacterial active matter through fluid viscoelasticity, supported by experiments and modeling.
Findings
Bacterial suspensions form millimeter-scale rotating vortices.
The vortex switches chirality periodically with tunable frequency.
Rheological properties can be used to control active flows.
Abstract
Active matter consists of units that generate mechanical work by consuming energy. Examples include living systems, such as assemblies of bacteria and biological tissues, biopolymers driven by molecular motors, and suspensions of synthetic self-propelled particles. A central question in the field is to understand and control the self-organization of active assemblies in space and time. Most active systems exhibit either spatial order mediated by interactions that coordinate the spatial structure and the motion of active agents or the temporal synchronization of individual oscillatory dynamics. The simultaneous control of spatial and temporal organization is more challenging and generally requires complex interactions, such as reaction-diffusion hierarchies or genetically engineered cellular circuits. Here, we report a novel and simple means to simultaneously control the spatial and…
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