Synchronization and hydrodynamic interactions

ORAL

Abstract

Cilia and flagella commonly beat in a coordinated manner. Examples include the flagella that Volvox colonies use to move, the cilia that sweep foreign particles up out of the human airway, and the nodal cilia that set up the flow that determines the left-right axis in developing vertebrate embryos. In this talk we present an experimental study of how hydrodynamic interactions can lead to coordination in a simple idealized system: two nearby paddles driven with fixed torques in a highly viscous fluid. The paddles attain a synchronized state in which they rotate together with a phase difference of 90 degrees. We discuss how synchronization depends on system parameters and present numerical calculations using the method of regularized stokeslets.

Authors

  • Thomas Powers

    • Division of Engineering, Box D, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912
    • Division of Engineering, Brown University
    • Brown University
  • Bian Qian

    • Division of Engineering, Brown University
  • Kenneth Breuer

    • Division of Engineering, Brown University