Spontaneous Emergence of Run-and-Tumble-Like Dynamics in a Robotic Analog of \textit{Chlamydomonas}: Experiment and Theory
Somnath Paramanick, Umashankar Pardhi, Harsh Soni, Nitin Kumar

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that a macroscopic robotic system can spontaneously exhibit run-and-tumble-like dynamics similar to extit{Chlamydomonas}, providing insights into microswimmer motility through experiment and theory.
Contribution
We designed a robotic analog that replicates RT behavior and developed a theoretical model to explain the physical mechanisms involved.
Findings
Robots exhibit sharp, direction-reversing tumbles.
Tumbling frequency is tunable via experimental parameters.
Robotic system captures key features of microswimmer RT dynamics.
Abstract
Run-and-tumble (RT) motion is commonly observed in flagellated microswimmers, arising from synchronous and asynchronous flagellar beating. One such example is a biflagellated alga, called \textit{Chlamydomonas reinhardtii}. Its flagellar synchronization is not only affected by hydrodynamic interactions but also through contractile stress fibers that mechanically couple the flagella, enabling adaptable swimming behavior. To explore this, we design a macroscopic mechanical system that comprises dry, self-propelled robots linked by a rigid rod to model this organism. By varying the attachment points of the two ends of the rod on each robot, the model incorporates the effect of fiber contractility observed in the real organism. To mimic a low Reynolds number environment, we program each robot to undergo overdamped active Brownian (AB) motion. We find that such a system exhibits RT-like…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Robotic Path Planning Algorithms
