Diverse behaviors in non-uniform chiral and non-chiral swarmalators

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Abstract

We study the emergent behaviors of a population of swarming coupled oscillators, dubbed swarmalators. Previous work considered the simplest, idealized case: identical swarmalators with global coupling. Here we expand this work by adding more realistic features: local coupling, non-identical natural frequencies, and chirality. This more realistic model generates a variety of new behaviors including lattices of vortices, beating clusters, and interacting phase waves. Similar behaviors are found across natural and artificial micro-scale collective systems, including social slime mold, spermatozoa vortex arrays, and Quincke rollers. Our results indicate a wide range of future use cases, both to aid characterization and understanding of natural swarms, and to design complex interactions in collective systems from soft and active matter to micro-robotics.

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Ceron, S., O’Keeffe, K., & Petersen, K. (2023). Diverse behaviors in non-uniform chiral and non-chiral swarmalators. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-36563-4

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