Abstract

The emergence of macroscopic order and patterns is a central paradigm in systems of (self-)propelled agents and a key component in the structuring of many biological systems. The relationships between the ordering process and the underlying microscopic interactions have been extensively explored both experimentally and theoretically. While emerging patterns often show one specific symmetry (e.g., nematic lane patterns or polarized traveling flocks), depending on the symmetry of the alignment interactions patterns with different symmetries can apparently coexist. Indeed, recent experiments with an actomysin motility assay suggest that polar and nematic patterns of actin filaments can interact and dynamically transform into each other. However, theoretical understanding of the mechanism responsible remains elusive. Here, we present a kinetic approach complemented by a hydrodynamic theory for agents with mixed alignment symmetries, which captures the experimentally observed phenomenology and provides a theoretical explanation for the coexistence and interaction of patterns with different symmetries. We show that local, pattern-induced symmetry breaking can account for dynamically coexisting patterns with different symmetries. Specifically, in a regime with moderate densities and a weak polar bias in the alignment interaction, nematic bands show a local symmetry-breaking instability within their high-density core region, which induces the formation of polar waves along the bands. These instabilities eventually result in a self-organized system of nematic bands and polar waves that dynamically transform into each other. Our study reveals a mutual feedback mechanism between pattern formation and local symmetry breaking in active matter that has interesting consequences for structure formation in biological systems.

Highlights

  • The emergence of macroscopic order and patterns is a central paradigm in systems ofpropelled agents and a key component in the structuring of many biological systems

  • Motivated by the intriguing dynamic coexistence of polar and nematic patterns observed in recent active-matter experiments and simulations [17], we studied a system of self-propelled particles that exhibit binary nematic alignment interactions with a tunable polar contribution

  • This self-organized transition leads to a rearrangement of the nematic bands which eventually results in a rich set of different final patterns, including coexistence of patterns with nematic and polar symmetry as well as dynamic transformations between them

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The emergence of macroscopic order and patterns is a central paradigm in systems of (self-)propelled agents and a key component in the structuring of many biological systems. In a regime with moderate densities and a weak polar bias in the alignment interaction, nematic bands show a local symmetry-breaking instability within their high-density core region, which induces the formation of polar waves along the bands These instabilities eventually result in a self-organized system of nematic bands and polar waves that dynamically transform into each other. This should be seen in light of the observation that in nature or in the laboratory microscopic details of the agent’s propulsion mechanism and interactions are often unclear or essentially inaccessible These properties of the agents might not even be inherent features (traits) characterized by a fixed set of parameters, but could in principle dynamically depend on the emergent collective behavior of the agents, as suggested for animal herds [14] or chemical active systems [15, 16]. Agent-based simulations indicate that both nematic and polarordered clusters can arise and even coexist when the microscopic alignment between agents is predominantly nematic with a polar contribution, due to either the interactions between extended

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.