Self-Aligning Polar Active Matter
Paul Baconnier, Olivier Dauchot, Vincent D\'emery, Gustavo D\"uring, Silke Henkes, Cristi\'an Huepe, Amir Shee

TL;DR
This paper reviews models of self-aligning polar active matter, highlighting its importance in dense biological systems, metamaterials, and swarm robotics, and provides a unified framework for understanding its dynamics and collective behaviors.
Contribution
It introduces a unified framework for self-aligning active matter models, emphasizing their significance in dense systems and proposing future research directions.
Findings
Self-alignment influences individual and collective dynamics.
Models show self-alignment leads to diverse self-organization phenomena.
Unified framework helps compare different self-alignment models.
Abstract
Self-alignment describes the property of a polar active unit to align or anti-align its orientation towards its velocity. In contrast to mutual alignment, where the headings of multiple active units tend to directly align to each other -- as in the celebrated Vicsek model --, self-alignment impacts the dynamics at the individual level by coupling the rotation and displacements of each active unit. This enriches the dynamics even without interactions or external forces, and allows, for example, a single self-propelled particle to orbit in a harmonic potential. At the collective level, self-alignment modifies the nature of the transition to collective motion already in the mean field description, and it can also lead to other forms of self-organization such as collective actuation in dense or solid elastic assemblies of active units. This has significant implications for the study of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Astro and Planetary Science
