Self-Limiting Trajectories of a Particle Moving Deterministically in a Random Medium
Benjamin Webb, E.G.D. Cohen

TL;DR
This paper investigates how a particle moves on a honeycomb lattice with randomly oriented scatterers, revealing a transition from periodic to self-avoiding motion as the medium's homogeneity increases.
Contribution
It introduces a model of particle motion in a random medium, showing how initial scatterer configurations influence the transition between periodic and self-avoiding trajectories.
Findings
Particle creates reflecting structures that limit its motion.
Transition from periodic to self-avoiding motion as p approaches 0 or 1.
Periodic dynamics can persist with non-identically distributed initial configurations.
Abstract
We study the motion of a particle moving on a two-dimensional honeycomb lattice, whose sites are randomly occupied by either right or left rotators, which rotate the particle's velocity to its right or left, according to deterministic rules. In the model we consider, the scatterers are each initially oriented to the right with probability . This is done independently, so that the initial configuration of scatterers, which forms the medium through which the particle moves, are both independent and identically distributed. For , we show that as the particle moves through the lattice, it creates a number of reflecting structures. These structures ultimately \emph{limit} the particle's motion, causing it to have a periodic trajectory. As approaches either 0 or 1, and the medium becomes increasingly homogenous, the particle's dynamics undergoes a discontinuous…
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