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17/01/21 09:30 AM IST

Anomalous behaviour of bacterial colonies

In news

Scientists have found a clue to dynamical origin of fluctuations in systems like fish schools, swarm of insects, flocking birds and bacterial colonies, which are called active matter systems.

Significance

This understanding can be useful in nanotechnology applications like building small-scale energy-efficient bio-devices as well as biomedical applications like characterizing infection spread in organs, antibiotic resistance and so on.

Finding
  • Such systems are made up of self-driven components which extract energy from their surroundings to generate mechanical work. 
  • Due to continuous energy input, such systems are driven far from equilibrium and exhibit, unlike in equilibrium, fascinating collective behaviours, like clustering, “giant” mass fluctuations and anomalous transport.
  • Particularly, their transport properties (molecular properties, analogous to viscosity, thermal conductivity and mobility that indicate the rate at which momentum, heat, and mass are transferred from one part of a system to another) can be perplexing at times.
Analogy to understand the finding
  • The anomalous behaviour of such systems can be understood by considering a cup of coffee, stirred with a spoon.
  • If one stops stirring, the coffee will eventually come to rest, due to the internal viscous forces, which resist the fluid motion.
  • In contrast, imagine “stirring” a bacterial solution, which, under suitable conditions (bacterial concentration), can exhibit perpetual or unceasing collective directed motion; in that case, the viscosity would vanish in such “active” bacterial fluids.
Source: PIB

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