Individual particle persistence antagonizes global ordering in populations of nematically aligning self-propelled particles

  • J. M. Nava-Sedeno
  • , R. Klages
  • , H. Hatzikirou
  • , Francisco J. Sevilla
  • , A. Deutsch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The transition from individual to collective motion plays a significant role in many biological processes. While the implications of different types of particle-particle interactions for the emergence of particular modes of collective motion have been well studied, it is unclear how particular types of individual migration patterns influence collective motion. Here, motivated by swarming bacteria Myxococcus xanthus, we investigate the combined effects of the individual pattern of migration and particle-particle interactions on the emergence of collective migration. We analyze the effects of a feature of individual pattern migration, the persistence of motion, on the collective properties of the system that emerge from interactions among individuals, particularly when nematic velocity alignment interaction mediates collective dynamics. We find, through computer simulations and mathematical analysis, that an initially disordered migratory state can become globally ordered by increasing either the particle-particle alignment interaction strength or the persistence of individual migration. In contrast, we find that persistence prevents the emergence of global nematic order when both persistence and nematic alignment are comparatively high. We conclude that behavior at the population level not only depends on interactions between individuals but also on their own intrinsic behavior.

Original languageBritish English
Article number025409
JournalPhysical Review E
Volume111
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2025

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