3,826 research outputs found
Gyrotactic phytoplankton in laminar and turbulent flows: a dynamical systems approach
Gyrotactic algae are bottom heavy, motile cells whose swimming direction is
determined by a balance between a buoyancy torque directing them upwards and
fluid velocity gradients. Gyrotaxis has, in recent years, become a paradigmatic
model for phytoplankton motility in flows. The essential attractiveness of this
peculiar form of motility is the availability of a mechanistic description
which, despite its simplicity, revealed predictive, rich in phenomenology,
easily complemented to include the effects of shape, feed-back on the fluid and
stochasticity (e.g. in cell orientation). In this review we consider recent
theoretical, numerical and experimental results to discuss how, depending on
flow properties, gyrotaxis can produce inhomogeneous phytoplankton
distributions on a wide range of scales, from millimeters to kilometers, in
both laminar and turbulent flows. In particular, we focus on the phenomenon of
gyrotactic trapping in nonlinear shear flows and in fractal clustering in
turbulent flows. We shall demonstrate the usefulness of ideas and tools
borrowed from dynamical systems theory in explaining and interpreting these
phenomena
Clustering and Turbophoresis in a Shear Flow without Walls
We investigate the spatial distribution of inertial particles suspended in
the bulk of a turbulent inhomogeneous flow. By means of direct numerical
simulations of particle trajectories transported by the turbulent Kolmogorov
flow, we study large and small scale mechanisms inducing inhomogeneities in the
distribution of heavy particles. We discuss turbophoresis both for large and
weak inertia, providing heuristic arguments for the functional form of the
particle density profile. In particular, we argue and numerically confirm that
the turbophoretic effect is maximal for particles of intermediate inertia. Our
results indicate that small-scale fractal clustering and turbophoresis peak in
different ranges in the particles' Stokes number and the separation of the two
peaks increases with the flow's Reynolds number.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Geotropic tracers in turbulent flows: a proxy for fluid acceleration
We investigate the statistics of orientation of small, neutrally buoyant,
spherical tracers whose center of mass is displaced from the geometrical
center. If appropriate-sized particles are considered, a linear relation can be
derived between the horizontal components of the orientation vector and the
same components of acceleration. Direct numerical simulations are carried out,
showing that such relation can be used to reconstruct the statistics of
acceleration fluctuations up to the order of the gravitational acceleration.
Based on such results, we suggest a novel method for the local experimental
measurement of accelerations in turbulent flows.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Appendiceal abscess in a giant left-sided inguinoscrotal hernia: a rare case of Amyand hernia
The hernia of Amyand is an inguinal hernia containing the appendix in the sac. It is a rare pathology often diagnosed only intra-operatively. We report a case even more rare of a giant left-sided inguinoscrotal Amyand hernia with appendiceal abscess without clinical findings of incarceration/strangulation, occlusion, perforation, or acute scrotum and with the presence in the sac of the caecum and other anatomical structures (last ileal loops, bladder and omentum). The 68-years-old man patient successfully underwent surgical treatment only through the hernia sac (meshless repair according to Postempski technique)
Turbulent fluid acceleration generates clusters of gyrotactic microorganisms
The motility of microorganisms is often biased by gradients in physical and
chemical properties of their environment, with myriad implications on their
ecology. Here we show that fluid acceleration reorients gyrotactic plankton,
triggering small-scale clustering. We experimentally demonstrate this
phenomenon by studying the distribution of the phytoplankton Chlamydomonas
augustae within a rotating tank and find it to be in good agreement with a new,
generalized model of gyrotaxis. When this model is implemented in a direct
numerical simulation of turbulent flow, we find that fluid acceleration
generates multi-fractal plankton clustering, with faster and more stable cells
producing stronger clustering. By producing accumulations in high-vorticity
regions, this process is fundamen- tally different from clustering by
gravitational acceleration, expanding the range of mechanisms by which
turbulent flows can impact the spatial distribution of active suspensions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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