Magnetic microswimmers exhibit Bose-Einstein-like condensation
ORAL
Abstract
We study an active matter system comprised of magnetic microswimmers confined in a microfluidic channel and show that it exhibits a new type of self-organized behavior. Combining analytical techniques and Brownian dynamics simulations, we demonstrate how the interplay of non-equilibrium activity, external driving, and magnetic interactions leads to the condensation of swimmers at the center of the channel via a non-equilibrium phase transition that is formally akin to Bose-Einstein condensation. We find that the effective dynamics of the microswimmers can be mapped onto a diffusivity-edge problem, and use the mapping to build a generalized thermodynamic framework, which is verified by a parameter-free comparison with our simulations. Our work reveals how driven active matter has the potential to generate exotic classical non-equilibrium phases of matter with traits that are analogous to those observed in quantum systems.
*This work has received funding from the Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme of the EU under Grant Agreement No. 665440, JSPS KAKENHI Grants No. 20K14649, and the Max Planck Society.
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Presenters
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Benoit Mahault
- Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization