Surfing and crawling macroscopic active particles under strong confinement: Inertial dynamics

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Abstract

We study two types of active (self-propelled) macroscopic particles under confinement: camphor surfers and hexbug crawlers, using a combined experimental, theoretical, and numerical approach. Unlike widely studied microscopic active particles and swimmers, where thermal forces are often important and inertia is negligible, our macroscopic particles exhibit complex dynamics due expressly to active nonthermal noise combined with inertial effects. Strong confinement induces accumulation at a finite distance within the boundary and gives rise to three distinguishable dynamical states; both depending on activity and inertia. These surprisingly complex dynamics arise already at the single-particle level-highlighting the importance of inertia in macroscopic active matter.

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Leoni, M., Paoluzzi, M., Eldeen, S., Estrada, A., Nguyen, L., Alexandrescu, M., … Ahmed, W. W. (2020). Surfing and crawling macroscopic active particles under strong confinement: Inertial dynamics. Physical Review Research, 2(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.043299

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