Steady and transient states in low-energy swarms: Stability and first-passage times
Authored by Sayegh Amara A Al, Leonid Klushin, Jihad Touma
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1103/physreve.93.032602
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Abstract
We investigate a class of agent-based models of self-propelled particles
(SPP) that interact according to a Morse potential in the presence of
friction, a class which was able to reproduce many of the intriguing
patterns of collective motion observed in nature. Specifically, we
compare two closely related SPP models in the literature that differ by
their prescription of particle drag and self-propulsion. Writing both
models in terms of nondimensional parameters allows us to show that the
dynamics in the highly viscous regime is independent of the precise
forms of drag and propulsion. In contrast to what is indicated in the
literature both models yield the same low-energy self-organized states:
the coherent flock and the rigid rotation states which are highly
ordered in both the coordinate and the velocity spaces and a
velocity-disordered droplet state where particles are confined to rings
which pass through the lattice points of the underlying Lagrange
configuration. In contrast to the first two states which are stable, the
third state is found to be a long-lived transient. In the regime
studied, relaxing to one of the ordered steady states is inevitable, but
how and when the transition occurs and what is the probability of ending
in one state rather than the other are functions of the model
parameters. Two types of transitions are characterized and first passage
times are computed. Eventually, the evolution of the order parameter is
explored in the framework of a Langevin-type equation, and the possible
metastability of the random droplet state is discussed.
Tags
models
Transitions
systems
collective behavior
Particle