Two-dimensional crystals on curved manifolds exhibit nontrivial defect
structures. Here, we consider "active crystals" on a sphere, which are composed
of self-propelled colloidal particles. Our work is based on a new
phase-field-crystal-type model that involves a density and a polarization field
on the sphere. Depending on the strength of the self-propulsion, three
different types of crystals are found: a static crystal, a self-spinning
"vortex-vortex" crystal containing two vortical poles of the local velocity,
and a self-translating "source-sink" crystal with a source pole where
crystallization occurs and a sink pole where the active crystal melts. These
different crystalline states as well as their defects are studied theoretically
here and can in principle be confirmed in experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure