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Morphology and dynamics of growing bacterial swarm

ORAL

Abstract

In nature, bacteria commonly expand their territory through colony spreading, with the interface morphology of these colonies varying across different environments. While a swarming bacteria droplet growing in oil, it bears a resemblance to traditional viscous fingering patterns but is the opposite. The morphodynamics of such a growing bacterial swarm remains unclear. Here, we answer this question by using a continuum model of a droplet containing swarming-growing bacteria. On the one hand, bacterial motility always destabilizes the flat interface through random collision, which promotes fingering. On the other hand, cell growth favors a flat interface by eliminating short-wave interfacial fluctuations. Overall, during the nutrient-independence growth, the morphology of swarming-growing bacterial droplets is determined by the interplay among cell motility, cell growth, and interface pinning.

Presenters

  • Yulin Li

    Xiamen University

Authors

  • Yulin Li

    Xiamen University

  • Qiqi Wen

    South University of Science and Technology

  • Shibo Wu

    South University of Science and Technology

  • Yitan Li

    Shandong University

  • Song Liu

    South University of Science and Technology

  • Zhihong You

    Xiamen University