Under special conditions bacteria excrete an attractant and aggregate. The
high density regions initially collapse into cylindrical structures, which
subsequently destabilize and break up into spherical aggregates. This paper
presents a theoretical description of the process, from the structure of the
collapsing cylinder to the spacing of the final aggregates. We show that
cylindrical collapse involves a delicate balance in which bacterial attraction
and diffusion nearly cancel, leading to corrections to the collapse laws
expected from dimensional analysis. The instability of a collapsing cylinder is
composed of two distinct stages: Initially, slow modulations to the cylinder
develop, which correspond to a variation of the collapse time along the
cylinder axis. Ultimately, one point on the cylinder pinches off. At this final
stage of the instability, a front propagates from the pinch into the remainder
of the cylinder. The spacing of the resulting spherical aggregates is
determined by the front propagation.Comment: 33 pages, 15 figure