The physics of active polymers and filaments
Roland G. Winkler, Gerhard Gompper

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theoretical understanding of active polymers and filaments, focusing on how activity and hydrodynamic interactions influence their structure and dynamics in biological and artificial systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of models and phenomena related to active polymers, emphasizing the coupling between activity, conformational degrees of freedom, and hydrodynamics.
Findings
Active polymers exhibit unique conformational and dynamical behaviors due to activity-hydrodynamics coupling.
Theoretical models reveal how activity influences polymer structure and motion.
Emergent phenomena depend on steric and hydrodynamic interactions.
Abstract
Active matter agents consume internal energy or extract energy from the environment for locomotion and force generation. Already rather generic models, such as ensembles of active Brownian particles, exhibit phenomena, which are absent at equilibrium, in particular motility-induced phase separation and collective motion. Further intriguing nonequilibrium effects emerge in assemblies of bound active agents as in linear polymers or filaments. The interplay of activity and conformational degrees of freedom gives rise to novel structural and dynamical features of individual polymers as well as in interacting ensembles. Such out-of-equilibrium polymers are an integral part of living matter, ranging from biological cells with filaments propelled by motor proteins in the cytoskeleton, and RNA/DNA in the transcription process, to long swarming bacteria and worms such as Proteus mirabilis and…
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