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Keeping speed and distance for aligned motion

Farkas, Illés and Kun, Jeromos Róbert and Yi, Jin and Gaoqi, He and Mingliang, Xu (2015) Keeping speed and distance for aligned motion. PHYSICAL REVIEW E - STATISTICAL, NONLINEAR AND SOFT MATTER PHYSICS (2001-2015), 91. ISSN 1539-3755

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Abstract

The cohesive collective motion (flocking, swarming) of autonomous agents is ubiquitously observed and exploited in both natural and man-made settings, thus, minimal models for its description are essential. In a model with continuous space and time we find that if two particles arrive symmetrically in a plane at a large angle, then (i) radial repulsion and (ii) linear self-propelling toward a fixed preferred speed are sufficient for them to depart at a smaller angle. For this local gain of momentum explicit velocity alignment is not necessary, nor are adhesion/attraction, inelasticity or anisotropy of the particles, or nonlinear drag. With many particles obeying these microscopic rules of motion we find that their spatial confinement to a square with periodic boundaries (which is an indirect form of attraction) leads to stable macroscopic ordering. As a function of the strength of added noise we see – at finite system sizes – a critical slowing down close to the order-disorder boundary and a discontinuous transition. After varying the density of particles at constant system size and varying the size of the system with constant particle density we predict that in the infinite system size (or density) limit the hysteresis loop disappears and the transition becomes continuous. We note that animals, humans, drones, etc. tend to move asynchronously and are often more responsive to motion than positions. Thus, for them velocity-based continuous models can provide higher precision than coordinate-based models. An additional characteristic and realistic feature of the model is that convergence to the ordered state is fastest at a finite density, which is in contrast to models applying (discontinuous) explicit velocity alignments and discretized time. In summary, we find that the investigated model can provide a minimal description of flocking.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: TIME; Time Factors; MOTION; Models, Theoretical; theoretical model; Autonomous agents; Collective motions; Spatial confinement; Condensed matter physics; Critical slowing down; Periodic boundaries; Particle densities; Disorder boundaries; Discontinuous transition; Density of particles;
Subjects: Q Science / természettudomány > QH Natural history / természetrajz > QH301 Biology / biológia
SWORD Depositor: MTMT SWORD
Depositing User: MTMT SWORD
Date Deposited: 11 Oct 2023 13:25
Last Modified: 11 Oct 2023 13:25
URI: http://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/176507

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