Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de la Matière Condensée

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Mathis Guéneau (Max Planck, Dresden)

Calendar
Séminaires
Date
26.05.2026 10:45 - 11:45
Location
Salle 523, couloir 12-13, 5è étage

Description

Spatiotemporal Characterization of Active Dynamics in Channels: Theory and Experiments

Swimming microorganisms often live in confined, complex environments, where they transition between bulk and near-surface dynamics. Their dynamics can be quantified in terms of first-passage statistics. In this talk, I will first consider run-and-tumble bacteria confined in a channel. Combining theoretical predictions based on a renewal framework with experimental observations of Escherichia coli, we study the statistics of the time required, after leaving one wall, to encounter either wall. I will discuss how incorporating heterogeneity in tumbling rates or non-exponential run-duration distributions affects the survival probability. In the second part of the talk, I will consider active Brownian dynamics between two walls. Using a systematic expansion, we compute first-passage properties. Exploiting Siegmund duality, we infer the corresponding spatial properties for active Brownian particles confined between hard walls and reveal a transition towards a wall-accumulated state, reminiscent of experimental observations.