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Information and motility exchange in collectives of active particles

We examine the interplay of motility and information exchange in a model of run-and-tumble active particles where the particle's motility is encoded as a bit of information that can be exchanged upon contact according to the rules of AND and OR logic gates in a circuit. Motile AND particles become non-motile upon contact with a non-motile particle. Conversely, motile OR particles remain motile upon collision with their non-motile counterparts. AND particles that have become non-motile additionally "reawaken", i.e., recover their motility, at a fixed rate $μ$, as in the SIS (Susceptible, Infected, Susceptible) model of epidemic spreading, where an infected agent can become healthy again, but keeps no memory of the recent infection, hence it is susceptible to a renewed infection. For $μ=0$, both AND and OR particles relax irreversibly to absorbing states of all non-motile or all motile particles, respectively. The relaxation kinetics is, however, faster for OR particles that remain active throughout the process. At finite $μ$, the AND dynamics is controlled by the interplay between reawakening and collision rates. The system evolves to a state of all motile particles (an absorbing state in the language of absorbing phase transitions) for $μ>μ_c$ and to a mixed state with coexisting motile and non-motile particles (an active state in the language of absorbing phase transitions) for $μ<μ_c$. The final state exhibits a rich structure controlled by motility-induced aggregation. Our work can be relevant to biochemical signaling in motile bacteria, the spreading of epidemics and of social consensus, as well as light-controlled organization of active colloids.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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