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Abstract
A dilute suspension of active Brownian particles in a dense compressible viscoelastic fluid, forms a natural setting to study the emergence of nonreciprocity during a dynamical phase transition. At these densities, the transport of active particles is strongly influenced by the passive medium and shows a dynamical jamming transition as a function of activity and medium density. In the process, the compressible medium is actively churned up – for low activity, the active particle gets self-trapped in a cavity of its own making, while for large activity, the active particle ploughs through the medium, either accompanied by a moving anisotropic wake, or leaving a porous trail. A hydrodynamic approach makes it evident that the active particle generates a long-range density wake which breaks fore-aft symmetry, consistent with the simulations. Accounting for the back-reaction of the compressible medium leads to (i) dynamical jamming of the active particle, and (ii) a dynamical non-reciprocal attraction between two active particles moving along the same direction, with the trailing particle catching up with the leading one in finite time. We emphasize that these nonreciprocal effects appear only when the active particles are moving and so manifest in the vicinity of the jamming-unjamming transition.
The field of dense active matter has been the fount of many intriguing phenomena. Here, authors show that nonreciprocal interactions can emerge between active particles due to a dynamical feedback between their motility and the corresponding slow remodelling of a dense passive compressible medium.
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1 Simons Centre for the Study of Living Machines, National Centre for Biological Sciences (TIFR), Bangalore, India (GRID:grid.510243.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 0501 1024)
2 Institute for Theoretical Physics, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany (GRID:grid.7450.6) (ISNI:0000 0001 2364 4210)
3 Carnegie Mellon University, Department of Physics, Pittsburgh, USA (GRID:grid.147455.6) (ISNI:0000 0001 2097 0344)
4 Simons Centre for the Study of Living Machines, National Centre for Biological Sciences (TIFR), Bangalore, India (GRID:grid.510243.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 0501 1024); International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (TIFR), Bangalore, India (GRID:grid.510240.2) (ISNI:0000 0004 1761 5095)