Instability of an active fluid jet
Takuji Ishikawa, Thanh-Nghi Dang, Eric Lauga

TL;DR
This paper investigates the stability of active fluid jets composed of microswimmers, revealing distinct instability modes for pullers and pushers, and enhancing understanding of active fluid collective behaviors.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of active fluid jet instabilities, highlighting differences between pullers and pushers and emphasizing the role of hydrodynamic interactions.
Findings
Puller jets break into droplets via varicose instability.
Pusher jets buckle and wave, showing sinuous instability.
Hydrodynamic interactions are crucial for instability mechanisms.
Abstract
The breakup of a fluid jet into droplets has long fascinated natural scientists, with early research dating back to the 19th century. Infinitesimal perturbations to a jet grow because of surface tension, which eventually leads to breakup of the jet into droplets (Rayleigh-Plateau instability). Although this classical phenomenon has long been studied, it is not clear how it is modified when the fluid is replaced by an active fluid. In this study, we investigate instabilities of a jet of an active fluid. The active fluid is modelled by a suspension of microswimmers that propel themselves by generating surface tangential velocities, i.e. squirmers. The squirmers are assumed to be bottom-heavy and heavier than the surrounding fluid, so that a downward jet of the active fluid self-assembles under gravity. Hydrodynamic interactions between squirmers are computed using the Stokesian dynamics…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
