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A liquid droplet, immersed into a Newtonian fluid, can be propelled solely by internal flow. In a simple model, this flow is generated by a collection of point forces, which represent externally actuated devices or model autonomous swimmers. We work out the general framework to compute the self-propulsion of the droplet as a function of the actuating forces and their positions within the droplet. A single point force, F with general orientation and position, r_0, gives rise to both, translational and rotational motion of the droplet. We show that the translational mobility is anisotropic and the rotational mobility can be nonmonotonic as a function of | r_0|, depending on the viscosity contrast. Due to the linearity of the Stokes equation, superposition can be used to discuss more complex arrays of point forces. We analyse force dipoles, such as a stresslet, a simple model of a biflagellate swimmer and a rotlet, representing a helical swimmer, driven by an external magnetic field. For a general force distribution with arbitrary high multipole moments the propulsion properties of the droplet depend only on a few low order multipoles: up to the quadrupole for translational and up to a special octopole for rotational motion. The coupled motion of droplet and device is discussed for a few exemplary cases. We show in particular that a biflagellate swimmer, modeled as a stresslet, achieves a steady comoving state, where the position of the device relative to the droplet remains fixed. In fact there are two fixpoints, symmetric with respect to the center of the droplet. A tiny external force selects one of them and allows to switch between forward and backward motion.
We consider a liquid droplet which is propelled solely by internal flow. In a simple model, this flow is generated by an autonomous actuator, which moves on a prescribed trajectory inside the droplet. In a biological system, the device could represen
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