Motility and Swimming: Universal Description and Generic Trajectories
A. Farutin, M.S. Rizvi, W.F. Hu, T.S. Lin, S. Rafai, C. Misbah

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that complex trajectories like straight, circular, and helical paths naturally emerge in autonomous swimmers due to symmetry-breaking bifurcations, without requiring asymmetry in shape or environment.
Contribution
It introduces a universal, model-independent framework showing that such trajectories arise from spontaneous symmetry breaking in isotropic active particles.
Findings
Trajectories emerge from pitchfork bifurcations as activity increases.
Self-congruent solutions explain complex motion without asymmetry.
A simple nonlinear model illustrates transitions from non-motile to helical motion.
Abstract
Autonomous locomotion is a ubiquitous phenomenon in biology and in physics of active systems at microscopic scale. This includes prokaryotic, eukaryotic cells (crawling and swimming) and artificial swimmers. An outstanding feature is the ability of these entities to follow complex trajectories, ranging from straight, curved (circular, helical...), to random-like ones. The non-straight nature of these trajectories is often explained as a consequence of the asymmetry of the particle or the medium in which it moves, or due to the presence of bounding walls, etc... Here, we show that straight, circular and helical trajectories emerge naturally in the absence of asymmetry of the swimmer or that of suspending medium. Our first proof is based on general considerations, without referring to an explicit form of a model. We show that these three trajectories correspond to self-congruent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
