Non-equilibrium geometric forces steer spiral waves on folded surfaces
Varun Venkatesh, Farzan Vafa, Martin Cramer Pedersen, Amin Doostmohammadi

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how surface curvature influences spiral wave dynamics on folded surfaces, revealing that brain geometry actively shapes neural activity and pattern formation in non-equilibrium systems.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework showing curvature as a modulator of spiral wave behavior via the Laplace Beltrami operator, with implications for neural and active matter systems.
Findings
Curvature induces a geometric force on spiral defects.
Surface folding stabilizes and localizes spiral waves.
Smoothing the surface erases spiral wave structures.
Abstract
Spiral waves are ubiquitous signatures of non equilibrium dynamics, appearing across chemical, biological, and active systems. Yet, in many living systems these waves unfold on curved and folded surfaces whose geometry has rarely been treated as a dynamical factor. Here we show that surface curvature fundamentally shapes spiral wave behavior and can contribute to the organization of neural activity in the brain. Via analytical theory and simulations of the complex Ginzburg Landau equation (CGLE) on curved surfaces, we demonstrate that curvature enters through the Laplace Beltrami operator as a spatial modulation of effective diffusion. Gradients of this effective diffusion generate a geometric force on spiral defects, and the complex nature of the CGLE produces a complex mobility that leads to non central and non reciprocal responses. Applied to realistic cortical surfaces of the human…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Micro and Nano Robotics · Slime Mold and Myxomycetes Research
