# A particle-field representation unifies paradigms in active matter

**Authors:** Robert Gro{\ss}mann, Igor S. Aranson, Fernando Peruani

arXiv: 1906.00277 · 2021-01-18

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a unified continuum field approach to active matter, revealing how particle shape and rigidity influence emergent order, bridging different paradigms like phase separation and collective motion.

## Contribution

It develops a novel particle-field representation inspired by wave-particle duality, unifying active matter behaviors and demonstrating how stresses and shape control emergent states.

## Key findings

- Anisotropic rods form polar, moving clusters.
- Soft rods exhibit nematic, large-scale structures.
- Symmetry of order is an emergent property, not dictated by interactions.

## Abstract

Active matter research focuses on the emergent behavior among interacting self-propelled particles. Unification of seemingly disconnected paradigms -- active phase-separation of repulsive discs and collective motion of self-propelled rods -- is a major challenge in contemporary active matter. Inspired by the quanto-mechanical wave-particle duality, we develop an approach based on the representation of active particles by smoothed continuum fields. On the basis of the collision kinetics, we demonstrate analytically and numerically how nonequilibrium stresses acting among self-driven, anisotropic objects hinder the formation of phase-separated states as observed for self-propelled discs and facilitate the emergence of orientational order. Besides particle shape, the rigidity of self-propelled objects controlling the symmetry of emergent ordered states is as a crucial parameter: impenetrable, anisotropic rods are found to form polar, moving clusters, whereas large-scale nematic structures emerge for soft rods, notably separated by a bistable coexistence regime. These results indicate that the symmetry of the ordered state is not dictated by the symmetry of the interaction potential but is rather a dynamical, emergent property of active systems. This unifying theoretical framework can represent a variety of active systems: living cell tissues, bacterial colonies, cytoskeletal extracts as well as shaken granular media.

## Full text

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## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00277/full.md

## References

109 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00277/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00277