Event

Physics Seminar: From single cells to filaments: a dance of geometry and motion

  • Conférencier  Talk by Speaker: Jan Cammann, invited by Prof. Anupam Sengupta

  • Lieu

    Campus Limpertsberg , BSC 003 webex link: https://unilu.webex.com/unilu/j.php?MTID=m1e81585df46babf0e6bf3fa3b90b8296

    LU

  • Thème(s)
    Physique & sciences des matériaux

From single cells to filaments: a dance of geometry and motion

In recent years, biological motile cells like bacteria and microalgae have attracted considerable interest

not only among biologists but also in the physics community and related fields. Understanding their

motion has immense biological and ecological implications. The possibility to harness their motion to

power microdevices is a topic of exceptional importance for modern microtechnology. When the motion

of a microscopic organism is observed closely, it appears erratic, and yet the combination of

nonequilibrium forces and surfaces can produce striking examples of organization in microbial systems.

Combining experiments, analytical and numerical calculations [1,2] we study the motion of motile cells

under controlled lab conditions and demonstrate that intricate patterns can be observed from the level

of a single cell exploring an isolated habitat to an entire colony. We consider two model organisms. In

the first part of this talk, we will discuss the influence of boundaries on the motion of a single

Chlamydomonas cell. We theoretically predict a universal relation between probability fluxes and

global geometric properties that is directly confirmed by experiments [2]. Our results represent a general

description of the structure of such nonequilibrium fluxes down at the single cell level. This might open

the possibility of designing devices that are able to guide the motion of such microbial cells. In the

second part of this talk, we will discuss recent results on colonies of cyanobacteria, their pattern

formation and order-disorder transition.

[1] J. Cammann, et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 118, e2024752118 (2021).

[2] T. Ostapenko, et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 068002 (2018).

Jan Cammann

Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical Modelling, Loughborough University, UK.

Jan Cammann completed Bachelor and Master in Physics degrees from the Georg August University of

Göttingen, Germany between 2013 – 2016 and 2016 – 2019 respectively, while working at the Max

Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization. Currently, Jan is a doctoral student working on

microbial motility at the Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical Modelling at Loughborough

University, UK under supervision of Dr. Marco G. Mazz