International audienceA variety of swimming microorganisms, called ciliates, exploit the bending of a large number of small and densely packed organelles, termed cilia, in order to propel themselves in a viscous fluid. We consider a spherical envelope model for such ciliary locomotion where the dynamics of the individual cilia are replaced by that of a continuous overlaying surface allowed to deform tangentially to itself. Employing a variational approach, we determine numerically the time-periodic deformation of such surface which leads to low-Reynolds locomotion with minimum rate of energy dissipation (maximum efficiency). Employing both Lagrangian and Eulerian points of views, we show that in the optimal swimming stroke, individual cilia...
International audienceWe study the locomotion of a ciliated microorganism in a viscous incompressibl...
The envisioned applications of microrobots in bodily fluids have raised the demand for effectively s...
Cells or bacteria carrying cilia on their surface show many striking features : alignment of cilia i...
International audienceA variety of swimming microorganisms, called ciliates, exploit the bending of ...
International audienceWe consider a class of low Reynolds number swimmers, of prolate spheroidal sha...
International audienceThe flow field created by swimming micro-organisms not only enables their loco...
AbstractCells carrying cilia on their surface show many striking features: alignment of cilia in an ...
Active oscillators, with purely hydrodynamic coupling, are useful simple models to understand variou...
Cilia are hair-like organelles, present in arrays that collectively beat to generate flow. Given the...
Motile cilia can produce net fluid flows at low Reynolds number because of their asymmetric motion a...
The quest for swimming microrobots originates from possible applications in medicine, especially inv...
AbstractBecause arrays of motile cilia drive fluids for a range of processes, the versatile mechano-...
The quest for swimming microrobots originates from possible applications in medicine, especially inv...
International audienceWe study the locomotion of a ciliated microorganism in a viscous incompressibl...
The envisioned applications of microrobots in bodily fluids have raised the demand for effectively s...
Cells or bacteria carrying cilia on their surface show many striking features : alignment of cilia i...
International audienceA variety of swimming microorganisms, called ciliates, exploit the bending of ...
International audienceWe consider a class of low Reynolds number swimmers, of prolate spheroidal sha...
International audienceThe flow field created by swimming micro-organisms not only enables their loco...
AbstractCells carrying cilia on their surface show many striking features: alignment of cilia in an ...
Active oscillators, with purely hydrodynamic coupling, are useful simple models to understand variou...
Cilia are hair-like organelles, present in arrays that collectively beat to generate flow. Given the...
Motile cilia can produce net fluid flows at low Reynolds number because of their asymmetric motion a...
The quest for swimming microrobots originates from possible applications in medicine, especially inv...
AbstractBecause arrays of motile cilia drive fluids for a range of processes, the versatile mechano-...
The quest for swimming microrobots originates from possible applications in medicine, especially inv...
International audienceWe study the locomotion of a ciliated microorganism in a viscous incompressibl...
The envisioned applications of microrobots in bodily fluids have raised the demand for effectively s...
Cells or bacteria carrying cilia on their surface show many striking features : alignment of cilia i...