9-13 giugno 2025
Hotel Palazzo Alabardieri
Europe/Rome timezone

Microbial billiards

Not scheduled
Sala Caracciolo (Hotel Palazzo Alabardieri)

Sala Caracciolo

Hotel Palazzo Alabardieri

Via Alabardieri 38, Napoli https://www.palazzoalabardieri.it/it

Speaker

Prof. Roberto Di Leonardo (DIPARTIMENTO DI FISICA SAPIENZA Università di Roma)

Description

Unlike gas molecules at equilibrium, the spatial organization of self-propelled particles can be very sensitive to what happens at the boundaries of their container. Understanding the link between boundary phenomena and bulk stationary distributions could enable the design of optimized container shapes for the geometric control of confined active particles. Here we propose a boundary method based on the flux transfer formalism typical of radiometry problems, where surface elements transmit and receive "rays" of active particles with infinite persistence length. We demonstrate the power of this boundary method in the case of the swimming microalgae Euglena gracilis trapped in light-defined billiard geometries. Leveraging our boundary method, we were able to design a stacked multi-stage billiard geometry, with a connection scheme between subunits that breaks spatial symmetry and achieves an exponential amplification of cell concentration between its two ends. Surprisingly, the sensitive dependence on boundary geometry observed in closed microbial billiards stands in marked contrast to the robust invariance of mean path lengths traced by E.coli bacteria swimming in microfabricated open billiards with frozen internal disorder.

Di Leonardo et al. arxiv.org/abs/2410.01916
Frangipane et al. Nature communications, 10, 1-6, (2019)

Role Professor/PI

Primary author

Prof. Roberto Di Leonardo (DIPARTIMENTO DI FISICA SAPIENZA Università di Roma)

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