313 research outputs found
Reply to comment on "Towards a quantitative kinetic theory of polar active matter" by Bertin et al
A reply on the comment of Bertin, Chate, Ginelli, Gregoire, Leonard and
Peshkov, arxiv:1404.3950v1, in this special issue
Large density expansion of a hydrodynamic theory for self-propelled particles
Recently, an Enskog-type kinetic theory for Vicsek-type models for
self-propelled particles has been proposed [T. Ihle, Phys. Rev. E 83, 030901
(2011)]. This theory is based on an exact equation for a Markov chain in phase
space and is not limited to small density. Previously, the hydrodynamic
equations were derived from this theory and its transport coefficients were
given in terms of infinite series. Here, I show that the transport coefficients
take a simple form in the large density limit. This allows me to analytically
evaluate the well-known density instability of the polarly ordered phase near
the flocking threshold at moderate and large densities. The growth rate of a
longitudinal perturbation is calculated and several scaling regimes, including
three different power laws, are identified. It is shown that at large
densities, the restabilization of the ordered phase at smaller noise is
analytically accessible within the range of validity of the hydrodynamic
theory. Analytical predictions for the width of the unstable band, the maximum
growth rate and for the wave number below which the instability occurs are
given. In particular, the system size below which spatial perturbations of the
homogeneous ordered state are stable is predicted to scale with
where is the average number of collision partners. The typical time scale
until the instability becomes visible is calculated and is proportional to M
Discussion on Peshkov et al., "Boltzmann-Ginzburg-Landau approach for continuous descriptions of generic Vicsek-like models"
A discussion on the contribution of Peshkov, Bertin, Ginelli and Chate,
arxiv:1404.3275v1, in this special issue
Active matter beyond mean-field: Ring-kinetic theory for self-propelled particles
A ring-kinetic theory for Vicsek-style models of self-propelled agents is
derived from the exact N-particle evolution equation in phase space. The theory
goes beyond mean-field and does not rely on Boltzmann's approximation of
molecular chaos. It can handle pre-collisional correlations and cluster
formation which both seem important to understand the phase transition to
collective motion. We propose a diagrammatic technique to perform a small
density expansion of the collision operator and derive the first two equations
of the BBGKY-hierarchy. An algorithm is presented that numerically solves the
evolution equation for the two-particle correlations on a lattice. Agent-based
simulations are performed and informative quantities such as orientational and
density correlation functions are compared with those obtained by ring-kinetic
theory. Excellent quantitative agreement between simulations and theory is
found at not too small noises and mean free paths. This shows that there is
parameter ranges in Vicsek-like models where the correlated closure of the
BBGKY-hierarchy gives correct and nontrivial results. We calculate the
dependence of the orientational correlations on distance in the disordered
phase and find that it seems to be consistent with a power law with exponent
around -1.8, followed by an exponential decay. General limitations of the
kinetic theory and its numerical solution are discussed
Tricritical points in a Vicsek model of self-propelled particles with bounded confidence
We study the orientational ordering in systems of self-propelled particles
with selective interactions. To introduce the selectivity we augment the
standard Vicsek model with a bounded-confidence collision rule: a given
particle only aligns to neighbors who have directions quite similar to its own.
Neighbors whose directions deviate more than a fixed restriction angle
are ignored. The collective dynamics of this systems is studied by agent-based
simulations and kinetic mean field theory. We demonstrate that the reduction of
the restriction angle leads to a critical noise amplitude decreasing
monotonically with that angle, turning into a power law with exponent 3/2 for
small angles. Moreover, for small system sizes we show that upon decreasing the
restriction angle, the kind of the transition to polar collective motion
changes from continuous to discontinuous. Thus, an apparent tricritical point
is identified and calculated analytically. We also find that at very small
interaction angles the polar ordered phase becomes unstable with respect to the
apolar phase. We show that the mean-field kinetic theory permits stationary
nematic states below a restriction angle of . We calculate the
critical noise, at which the disordered state bifurcates to a nematic state,
and find that it is always smaller than the threshold noise for the transition
from disorder to polar order. The disordered-nematic transition features two
tricritical points: At low and high restriction angle the transition is
discontinuous but continuous at intermediate . We generalize our
results to systems that show fragmentation into more than two groups and obtain
scaling laws for the transition lines and the corresponding tricritical points.
A novel numerical method to evaluate the nonlinear Fredholm integral equation
for the stationary distribution function is also presented.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figure
Kinetic Theory of Flocking: Derivation of Hydrodynamic Equations
It is shown how to explicitly coarse-grain the microscopic dynamics of the
Vicsek model for self-propelled agents. The macroscopic transport equations are
derived by means of an Enskog-type kinetic theory. Expressions for all
transport coefficients at large particle speed are given. The phase transition
from a disordered to a flocking state is studied numerically and analytically.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
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