Abstract

Fish, birds, insects and robots frequently swim or fly in groups. During their three dimensional collective motion, these agents do not stop, they avoid collisions by strong short-range repulsion, and achieve group cohesion by weak long-range attraction. In a minimal model that is isotropic, and continuous in both space and time, we demonstrate that (i) adjusting speed to a preferred value, combined with (ii) radial repulsion and an (iii) effective long-range attraction are sufficient for the stable ordering of autonomously moving agents in space. Our results imply that beyond these three rules ordering in space requires no further rules, for example, explicit velocity alignment, anisotropy of the interactions or the frequent reversal of the direction of motion, friction, elastic interactions, sticky surfaces, a viscous medium, or vertical separation that prefers interactions within horizontal layers. Noise and delays are inherent to the communication and decisions of all moving agents. Thus, next we investigate their effects on ordering in the model. First, we find that the amount of noise necessary for preventing the ordering of agents is not sufficient for destroying order. In other words, for realistic noise amplitudes the transition between order and disorder is rapid. Second, we demonstrate that ordering is more sensitive to displacements caused by delayed interactions than to uncorrelated noise (random errors). Third, we find that with changing interaction delays the ordered state disappears at roughly the same rate, whereas it emerges with different rates. In summary, we find that the model discussed here is simple enough to allow a fair understanding of the modeled phenomena, yet sufficiently detailed for the description and management of large flocks with noisy and delayed interactions. Our code is available at http://github.com/fij/floc.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn all fields of life recent technological developments have lead to a surge in data acquisition

  • Collective motion in 2 and 3 dimensionsIn all fields of life recent technological developments have lead to a surge in data acquisition

  • In a minimal model that is isotropic, and continuous in both space and time, we demonstrate that (i) adjusting speed to a preferred value, combined with (ii) radial repulsion and an (iii) effective long-range attraction are sufficient for the stable ordering of autonomously moving agents in space

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In all fields of life recent technological developments have lead to a surge in data acquisition. More detailed mechanisms of the alignment include anisotropic interactions caused by elongated shapes [12,13,14,15], combined with a frequent reversal of the direction of motion [16], the preference for movements in the horizontal plane (as opposed to vertical movements) [17], a viscous medium [18], friction among the agents and inelastic collisions [19, 20], and sticking together [21]. Note that the first term on the right hand side of Eq 1 points toward the ith agent’s own direction of motion, ~vi=j~vij In other words, this simplified model separates collision avoidance (second term) from keeping the preferred speed (first term). We include noise into the model by adding a random ~x vector to the right hand side of Eq 1 This vector is uncorrelated both in time and among agents, its direction is distributed uniformly in space, and its magnitude is a constant, ξ. Only within its own grid cell and the neighboring 26 grid cells

Results
À hE4i
Discussion and outlook
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.