Persistent motion of a Brownian particle subject to repulsive feedback with time delay
Robin A. Kopp, Sabine H. L. Klapp

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamics of a Brownian particle under time-delayed, non-linear feedback control, revealing persistent, active-like motion and enhanced diffusion, with analytical and numerical insights into its behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model of a Brownian particle with repulsive delayed feedback, linking its dynamics to active particle behavior and deriving analytical estimates for key parameters.
Findings
Particle exhibits steady, non-zero velocity under certain feedback conditions.
Long-time motion shows persistence despite directional randomness.
Effective diffusion coefficient is significantly increased compared to free diffusion.
Abstract
Based on analytical and numerical calculations we study the dynamics of an overdamped colloidal particle moving in two dimensions under time-delayed, non-linear feedback control. Specifically, the particle is subject to a force derived from a repulsive Gaussian potential depending on the difference between its instantaneous position, , and its earlier position , where is the delay time. Considering first the deterministic case, we provide analytical results for both, the case of small displacements and the dynamics at long times. In particular, at appropriate values of the feedback parameters, the particle approaches a steady state with a constant, non-zero velocity whose direction is constant as well. In the presence of noise, the direction of motion becomes randomized at long times, but the (numerically obtained) velocity autocorrelation still…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
