Self-Propelled Particles with Velocity Reversals and Ferromagnetic Alignment: Active Matter Class with Second-Order Transition to Quasi-Long-Range Polar Order

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Abstract

We introduce and study in two dimensions a new class of dry, aligning active matter that exhibits a direct transition to orientational order, without the phase-separation phenomenology usually observed in this context. Characterized by self-propelled particles with velocity reversals and a ferromagnetic alignment of polarities, systems in this class display quasi-long-range polar order with continuously varying scaling exponents, yet a numerical study of the transition leads to conclude that it does not belong to the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless universality class but is best described as a standard critical point with an algebraic divergence of correlations. We rationalize these findings by showing that the interplay between order and density changes the role of defects.

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Mahault, B., Jiang, X. C., Bertin, E., Ma, Y. Q., Patelli, A., Shi, X. Q., & Chaté, H. (2018). Self-Propelled Particles with Velocity Reversals and Ferromagnetic Alignment: Active Matter Class with Second-Order Transition to Quasi-Long-Range Polar Order. Physical Review Letters, 120(25). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.258002

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