Author:
ROBERTS A. M.,DEACON F. M.
Abstract
Scale model experiments on axially symmetric bodies exhibiting fore–aft asymmetry
are described. Body shapes are specified by a three parameter equation: two of the
parameters (a and b) describe the length and breadth of the body and the third (c)
the degree of asymmetry. Objects of this shape orientate as they sediment downwards
under gravity until the narrower end lies uppermost, after which they fall vertically
downward with no further change in orientation. For the range of parameters
investigated the sedimentation velocities, both when vertical and horizontal, are governed
principally by a and b, while the rate of orientation is determined by c. The
sedimentation characteristics of bodies which cannot be described exactly by the equation
can be predicted approximately using best-fit values for a, b and c. These results
are applied to consider the role of front–rear asymmetry in ciliated free-swimming
micro-organisms. The shape asymmetry is probably sufficient to account for the observed
orientation rates in the ciliated protozoan Paramecium. It is suggested that
these results may be used to deduce the sedimentation behaviour of ciliates from
microscope images of individual cells. In small flagellates such as Chlamydomonas the
orientating effects of the protruding flagella are much larger than the effects of cell
body asymmetry. The extreme sensitivity of the orientation rate to slight changes in
body shape and flagellar beat patterns may explain why experiments to distinguish
between various orientational mechanisms involved in gravitaxis have in the past
produced equivocal results.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
40 articles.
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