Enhanced Activity Reduces the Duration of Intermittent L\'evy Walks in Bacterial Turbulence
G. Dhananjay, M. Hemlata, Saravanan Matheshwaran, Sivasurender, Chandran

TL;DR
This study investigates how increased bacterial activity shortens the duration of intermittent Le9vy walks in bacterial turbulence, revealing microscopic dynamics and their control through flow activity levels.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed correlation between microscopic bacterial motion and collective turbulence, highlighting how activity influences Le9vy walk durations.
Findings
Higher activity decreases the persistence length and time of bacterial flow.
Bacteria exhibit initial ballistic motion followed by intermittent Le9vy walks.
Flow activity controls the transition in microscopic dynamics.
Abstract
Dense bacterial suspensions display collective motion exhibiting coherent flow structures reminiscent of turbulent flows. In contrast to inertial turbulence, understanding the microscopic dynamics of bacterial fluid elements undergoing collective motion is in its incipient stages. Here, we report experiments revealing correlations between the microscopic dynamics and the emergence of collective motion in bacterial suspensions. Our detailed analysis of the passive tracers and the velocity field of the bacterial suspensions allowed us to systematically correlate the Lagrangian and the Eulerian perspectives. Bacteria within the collective dynamics revealed initial ballistic dynamics followed by intermittent L\'evy walk before the eventual decay to random Gaussian fluctuations. Intriguingly, the persistence length and time of the fluid motion decrease with an increase in the activity,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiffusion and Search Dynamics · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies
