Thermodynamics and computation during collective motion near criticality
Emanuele Crosato, Richard E. Spinney, Ramil Nigmatullin, Joseph T., Lizier, Mikhail Prokopenko

TL;DR
This paper investigates the thermodynamic aspects of collective motion near criticality, revealing how energy, work, and entropy interplay during phase transitions in simulated self-propelled particles, with implications for understanding order and efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a thermodynamic framework to quantify energy, work, and entropy changes during collective motion phase transitions, linking them with information geometry.
Findings
Critical regimes identified where entropy decreases
Work and internal energy change rates decrease at criticality
Entropy reduction peaks at phase transition
Abstract
We study self-organisation of collective motion as a thermodynamic phenomenon, in the context of the first law of thermodynamics. It is expected that the coherent ordered motion typically self-organises in the presence of changes in the (generalised) internal energy and of (generalised) work done on, or extracted from, the system. We aim to explicitly quantify changes in these two quantities in a system of simulated self-propelled particles, and contrast them with changes in the system's configuration entropy. In doing so, we adapt a thermodynamic formulation of the curvatures of the internal energy and the work, with respect to two parameters that control the particles' alignment. This allows us to systematically investigate the behaviour of the system by varying the two control parameters to drive the system across a kinetic phase transition. Our results identify critical regimes and…
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