Spontaneous Emergence of Solitary Waves in Active Flow Networks with Elastic Elements
Rodrigo Fern\'andez-Quevedo Garc\'ia, Gon\c{c}alo Cruz Antunes, Jens Harting, Holger Stark, Chantal Valeriani, Martin Brandenbourger, Juan Jos\'e Mazo, Paolo Malgaretti, Miguel Ruiz-Garc\'ia

TL;DR
This paper models active flow networks with elastic elements, demonstrating how solitary waves spontaneously emerge and support information transmission, with potential applications in engineered information processing systems.
Contribution
It introduces a discrete, physically grounded model of active flow networks that reveals how solitary waves form and propagate, enriching understanding of information transport in such systems.
Findings
Pressure fields can develop solitary waves supporting localized information packets.
Emergence and properties of solitary waves depend on system parameters.
Coupled elastic units lead to complex, power-law distributed wave dynamics.
Abstract
Flow networks are fundamental for understanding systems such as animal and plant vasculature or power distribution grids. These networks can encode, transmit, and transform information embodied in the spatial and temporal distribution of their flows. In this work, we focus on a minimal yet physically grounded system that allows us to isolate the fundamental mechanisms by which active flow networks generate and regulate emergent dynamics capable of supporting information transmission. The system is composed of active units that pump fluid and elastic units that store volume. From first principles, we derive a discrete model -- an active flow network -- that enables the simulation of large systems with many interacting units. Numerically, we show that the pressure field can develop solitary waves, resulting in the spontaneous creation and transmission of localized packets of information…
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