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Microbial jets in metabolically driven flows

POSTER

Abstract

In liquid environments, interactions between microbial activity and hydrodynamic flows can lead to a large variety of behaviors. In this talk, I will show that when grown on a viscous liquid S. cerevisiae (baker's yeast) can behave like "active matter". The collective metabolism drives a fluid flow many times larger than the colony expansion speed, resulting in mechanical stresses and preferential growth which can generate a jetting phenomenon with yeast cells. I will present laboratory experiments, combined with numerical modeling, and discuss how microbial expansions on a liquid interface provide a versatile system to explore the interplay between hydrodynamics, growth and competition.

Authors

  • Severine Atis

    University of Chicago - James Frank Institute

  • Vamsi Spandan

    Harvard University - School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

  • Michael P. Brenner

    Harvard University and Google Research, Harvard University, Harvard University - School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

  • David R. Nelson

    Harvard University - Department of Physics