Hyperuniformity in phase ordering: the roles of activity, noise, and non-constant mobility
Filippo De Luca, Xiao Ma, Cesare Nardini, Michael E. Cates

TL;DR
This paper extends the understanding of hyperuniformity in phase-separating fluids, showing that noise and activity influence the structure factor scaling, with new analytical and numerical insights into transient regimes and long-term behavior.
Contribution
It generalizes Tomita's scaling analysis to active systems and non-constant mobility, revealing the persistence of hyperuniformity exponent and the effects of noise-induced transient regimes.
Findings
Hyperuniformity exponent confirmed in active and passive systems.
Noise induces a transient scaling regime in structure factor.
In one dimension, regime persists indefinitely with noise.
Abstract
Hyperuniformity emerges generically in the coarsening regime of phase-separating fluids. Numerical studies of active and passive systems have shown that the structure factor behaves as for , with hyperuniformity exponent . For passive systems, this result was explained in 1991 by a qualitative scaling analysis of Tomita, exploiting isotropy at scales much larger than the coarsening length . Here we reconsider and extend Tomita's argument to address cases of active phase separation and of non-constant mobility, again finding . We further show that dynamical noise of variance creates a transient regime for , crossing over to at larger . Here, is the coarsening exponent, with , and …
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