Premelting controlled active matter in ice
Jeremy Vachier, John S. Wettlaufer

TL;DR
This paper investigates how premelting and thermal regelation influence active particles in ice, combining biological and geophysical perspectives, and models their dynamics using active Ornstein-Uhlenbeck processes.
Contribution
It introduces a stochastic framework to model active matter in ice, accounting for premelting and thermal regelation effects on particle dynamics.
Findings
Thermal regelation affects particle redistribution in ice.
Active particles exhibit enhanced diffusion during regelation.
Implications for ice core dating accuracy.
Abstract
Self-propelled particles can undergo complex dynamics due to a range of bulk and surface interactions. When a particle is embedded in a host solid near its bulk melting temperature, the latter may melt at the surface of the former in a process known as interfacial premelting. The thickness of the melt film depends on the temperature, impurities, material properties and geometry. A temperature gradient is accompanied by a thermomolecular pressure gradient that drives the interfacial liquid from high to low temperatures and hence the particle from low to high temperatures, in a process called thermal regelation. When the host material is ice and the embedded particle is a biological entity, one has a particularly novel form of active matter, which addresses interplay between a wide range of problems, from extremophiles of both terrestrial and exobiological relevance to ecological dynamics…
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