Soft Active Matter
M. C. Marchetti, J.-F. Joanny, S. Ramaswamy, T. B. Liverpool, J., Prost, Madan Rao, R. Aditi Simha

TL;DR
This review synthesizes theoretical advances in active matter, connecting models with experiments across biological and synthetic systems, highlighting instabilities, and proposing future research directions for a comprehensive understanding.
Contribution
It unifies various theoretical approaches to active matter, contrasting dry and hydrodynamic systems, and relates them to experimental observations in biological and artificial contexts.
Findings
Identification of key instabilities in active matter systems
Comparison of dry and wet active matter dynamics
Connection of continuum theories with experimental systems
Abstract
In this review we summarize theoretical progress in the field of active matter, placing it in the context of recent experiments. Our approach offers a unified framework for the mechanical and statistical properties of living matter: biofilaments and molecular motors in vitro or in vivo, collections of motile microorganisms, animal flocks, and chemical or mechanical imitations. A major goal of the review is to integrate the several approaches proposed in the literature, from semi-microscopic to phenomenological. In particular, we first consider "dry" systems, defined as those where momentum is not conserved due to friction with a substrate or an embedding porous medium, and clarify the differences and similarities between two types of orientationally ordered states, the nematic and the polar. We then consider the active hydrodynamics of a suspension, and relate as well as contrast it…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Hemoglobin structure and function · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
