Nonequilibrium mode-coupling theory for dense active systems of self-propelled particles
Saroj Kumar Nandi, Nir S. Gov

TL;DR
This paper develops a nonequilibrium mode-coupling theory for dense active particle systems, revealing how activity parameters influence effective temperature and relaxation times, with results validated by simulations.
Contribution
The authors introduce a nonequilibrium MCT framework incorporating activity as colored noise, providing new insights into the glass transition and effective temperature in dense active systems.
Findings
Effective temperature approaches a constant at long times depending on activity.
Relaxation time scales as f_0^{-2γ} with γ=1.74, near the MCT exponent.
Simulation results agree well with the theoretical scaling predictions.
Abstract
The physics of active systems of self-propelled particles, in the regime of a dense liquid state, is an open puzzle of great current interest, both for statistical physics and because such systems appear in many biological contexts. We develop a nonequilibrium mode-coupling theory (MCT) for such systems, where activity is included as a colored noise with the particles having a self-propulsion foce and persistence time . Using the extended MCT and a generalized fluctuation-dissipation theorem, we calculate the effective temperature of the active fluid. The nonequilibrium nature of the systems is manifested through a time-dependent that approaches a constant in the long-time limit, which depends on the activity parameters and . We find, phenomenologically, that this long-time limit is captured by the potential energy of a single, trapped…
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