Mesoscale pattern formation of self-propelled rods with velocity reversal
Robert Gro{\ss}mann, Fernando Peruani, Markus B\"ar

TL;DR
This study investigates how velocity reversal influences pattern formation in self-propelled rods, revealing that reversal frequency controls the emergence, stability, and dynamics of elongated band patterns through bifurcations and nonlinear interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a hydrodynamic theory linking reversal frequency to pattern formation, providing insights into bacterial behavior and active matter systems.
Findings
High reversal frequency suppresses stable band formation.
Bands exhibit weak attraction and fuse upon collision.
A critical reversal rate determines band stability and transverse instability.
Abstract
We study self-propelled particles with velocity reversal interacting by uniaxial (nematic) alignment within a coarse-grained hydrodynamic theory. Combining analytical and numerical continuation techniques, we show that the physics of this active system is essentially controlled by the reversal frequency. In particular, we find that elongated, high-density, ordered patterns, called bands, emerge via subcritical bifurcations from spatially homogeneous states. Our analysis reveals further that the interaction of bands is weakly attractive and, consequently, bands fuse upon collision in analogy with nonequilibrium nucleation processes. Moreover, we demonstrate that a renormalized positive line tension can be assigned to stable bands below a critical reversal rate, beyond which they are transversally unstable. In addition, we discuss the kinetic roughening of bands as well as their nonlinear…
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