Spatially patterned phases in a reaction-time-symmetry-broken model of flocking
Charles R. Packard, Daniel M. Sussman

TL;DR
This paper introduces a flocking model with time-delayed interactions that reveals a new spatially patterned phase within the polar flocking state, showing how temporal asymmetries can significantly influence active matter behavior.
Contribution
The study presents a minimal Vicsek-like model with time delays and uncovers a novel spatially patterned phase within flocking, highlighting the impact of temporal asymmetries on collective dynamics.
Findings
Identification of a second transition to a spatially patterned phase
Demonstration of the phase's stability linked to a slow-relaxing index-order field
Sensitivity of the pattern to finite-size effects and temporal asymmetries
Abstract
We introduce a Vicsek-like flocking model with a minimal form of time-delayed orientational interactions, in which the delays occur on a time scale that is well-separated from other time scales in the model. We achieve this by implementing an ``index-ordered'' update rule, mimicking a scenario in which agents have a distribution of times with which they react to information. This model retains the usual disorder-to-order transition common in flocking models, but we show that it also possesses a second transition, deep in the polar flocking phase, to a state with spatially patterned transverse velocities. We characterize this transition and its sensitivity to finite-size effects using the Binder cumulant, and demonstrate -- via direct measurements and by measuring a susceptibility of the phase to particle index permutations -- that the stability of this phase is directly tied to a subtle…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Distributed Control Multi-Agent Systems · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence
