Topological active matter
Suraj Shankar, Anton Souslov, Mark J. Bowick, M. Cristina Marchetti,, and Vincenzo Vitelli

TL;DR
This review explores how topology influences active matter systems, focusing on topological defects, edge modes, and their implications for microfluidics, biological tissues, and robotic materials, highlighting robustness from topological invariants.
Contribution
It provides an elementary introduction to topological phenomena in active matter, emphasizing experimental examples and the role of topological invariants in defect dynamics and wave propagation.
Findings
Topological defects can self-propel and proliferate in active nematics.
Propagation of waves in active media is affected by topological invariants.
Topological properties can be utilized in designing robotic metamaterials.
Abstract
Active matter encompasses different nonequilibrium systems in which individual constituents convert energy into non-conservative forces or motion at the microscale. This review provides an elementary introduction to the role of topology in active matter through experimentally relevant examples. Here, the focus lies on topological defects and topologically protected edge modes with an emphasis on the distinctive properties they acquire in active media. These paradigmatic examples represent two physically distinct classes of phenomena whose robustness can be traced to a common mathematical origin: the presence of topological invariants. These invariants are typically integer numbers that cannot be changed by continuous deformations of the relevant order parameters or physical parameters of the underlying medium. We first explain the mechanisms whereby topological defects self propel and…
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