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Active matter: Quantifying the departure from equilibrium

Elijah Flenner, Grzegorz Szamel

2020Physical review. E41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Active matter systems are driven out of equilibrium at the level of individual constituents. One widely studied class are systems of athermal particles that move under the combined influence of interparticle interactions and self-propulsions, with the latter evolving according to the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck stochastic process. Intuitively, these so-called active Ornstein-Uhlenbeck particle (AOUP) systems are farther from equilibrium for longer self-propulsion persistence times. Quantitatively, this is confirmed by the increasing equal-time velocity correlations (which are trivial in equilibrium) and by the increasing violation of the Einstein relation between the self-diffusion and mobility coefficients. In contrast, the entropy production rate, calculated from the ratio of the probabilities of the position space trajectory and its time-reversed counterpart, has a nonmonotonic dependence on the persistence time. Thus, it does not properly quantify the departure of AOUP systems from equilibrium.

Topics & Concepts

Active matterStatistical physicsEconomicsEnvironmental scienceEconometricsPhysicsBiologyCell biologyMicro and Nano RoboticsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical MechanicsMolecular Communication and Nanonetworks
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