Enhanced diffusion is an emergent property of many experimental microswimmer systems that usually arises from a combination of ballistic motion with random reorientations. A subset of these systems, autophoretic droplet swimmers that move as a result of Marangoni stresses, have additionally been shown to respond to local, self-produced chemical gradients that can mediate self-avoidance or self-attraction. Via this mechanism, we present a mathematical model constructed to encode experimentally observed self-avoidant memory and numerically study the effect of this particular memory on the enhanced diffusion of such swimming droplets. To disentangle the enhanced diffusion due to the random reorientations from the enhanced diffusion due to the ...
Active suspensions of microswimmers such as bacteria or microalgae are found in oceans or lakes, and...
Collective states of inanimate particles self-assemble through physical interactions and thermal mot...
In a recent Letter (Y. Sumino et al., PRL 94, 068301 (2005)) a spontaneous motion of an oil droplet ...
A self-propelled artificial microswimmer is often modeled as a ballistic Brownian particle moving w...
A self-propelled artificial microswimmer is often modeled as a ballistic Brownian particle moving w...
A self-propelled artificial microswimmer is often modeled as a ballistic Brownian particle moving w...
Chemotaxis and autochemotaxis play an important role in many essential biological processes. We pres...
7 pages, 3 figuresBrownian motion is widely used as a model of diffusion in equilibrium media throug...
Microscopic active droplets are able to swim autonomously in viscous flows: this puzzling feature st...
Artículo de publicación ISIWe consider two systems of active swimmers moving close to a solid surfac...
Whether they be spermatozoa in cervical mucus, or {\it C. elegans} in wet soil, swimming cells often...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
Active suspensions of microswimmers such as bacteria or microalgae are found in oceans or lakes, and...
Collective states of inanimate particles self-assemble through physical interactions and thermal mot...
In a recent Letter (Y. Sumino et al., PRL 94, 068301 (2005)) a spontaneous motion of an oil droplet ...
A self-propelled artificial microswimmer is often modeled as a ballistic Brownian particle moving w...
A self-propelled artificial microswimmer is often modeled as a ballistic Brownian particle moving w...
A self-propelled artificial microswimmer is often modeled as a ballistic Brownian particle moving w...
Chemotaxis and autochemotaxis play an important role in many essential biological processes. We pres...
7 pages, 3 figuresBrownian motion is widely used as a model of diffusion in equilibrium media throug...
Microscopic active droplets are able to swim autonomously in viscous flows: this puzzling feature st...
Artículo de publicación ISIWe consider two systems of active swimmers moving close to a solid surfac...
Whether they be spermatozoa in cervical mucus, or {\it C. elegans} in wet soil, swimming cells often...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
The effect of crowding on the run-and-tumble dynamics of swimmers such as bacteria is studied using ...
Active suspensions of microswimmers such as bacteria or microalgae are found in oceans or lakes, and...
Collective states of inanimate particles self-assemble through physical interactions and thermal mot...
In a recent Letter (Y. Sumino et al., PRL 94, 068301 (2005)) a spontaneous motion of an oil droplet ...