A renormalization group study of the dynamics of active membranes: universality classes and scaling laws
Francesco Cagnetta, Viktor Skultety, Martin R. Evans, Davide, Marenduzzo

TL;DR
This paper uses renormalization group analysis to classify the critical behavior of active membranes driven by internal forces, revealing new universality classes and scaling laws relevant for biological membranes.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model for active membrane dynamics with a kinematic coupling, and uncovers novel critical points and scaling regimes through perturbative RG analysis.
Findings
Dynamical scaling is acoustic (exponent 1) with non-zero normal velocity.
Cross-over to diffusive scaling occurs at zero normal velocity.
Identification of new critical points with distinct scaling regimes.
Abstract
Motivated by experimental observations of patterning at the leading edge of motile eukaryotic cells, we introduce a general model for the dynamics of nearly-flat fluid membranes driven from within by an ensemble of activators. We include, in particular, a kinematic coupling between activator density and membrane slope which generically arises whenever the membrane has a non-vanishing normal speed. We unveil the phase diagram of the model by means of a perturbative field-theoretical renormalization group analysis. Due to the aforementioned kinematic coupling the natural dynamical scaling is acoustic, that is the dynamical critical exponent is 1. However, as soon as the the normal velocity of the membrane is tuned to zero, the system crosses over to diffusive dynamic scaling in mean field. Distinct critical points can be reached depending on how the limit of vanishing velocity is…
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