Sinhuber Michael, Ouellette Nicholas T
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
Phys Rev Lett. 2017 Oct 27;119(17):178003. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.178003. Epub 2017 Oct 24.
Animal aggregations are visually striking, and as such are popular examples of collective behavior in the natural world. Quantitatively demonstrating the collective nature of such groups, however, remains surprisingly difficult. Inspired by thermodynamics, we applied topological data analysis to laboratory insect swarms and found evidence for emergent, material-like states. We show that the swarms consist of a core "condensed" phase surrounded by a dilute "vapor" phase. These two phases coexist in equilibrium, and maintain their distinct macroscopic properties even though individual insects pass freely between them. We further define a pressure and chemical potential to describe these phases, extending theories of active matter to aggregations of macroscopic animals and laying the groundwork for a thermodynamic description of collective animal groups.
动物聚集在视觉上引人注目,因此是自然界中集体行为的常见例子。然而,定量地证明这类群体的集体性质仍然非常困难。受热力学启发,我们将拓扑数据分析应用于实验室中的昆虫群,并发现了出现类似物质状态的证据。我们表明,虫群由一个核心“凝聚”相和一个稀薄的“气相”相组成。这两个相在平衡中共存,即使个体昆虫可以在它们之间自由穿梭,它们仍保持各自不同的宏观特性。我们进一步定义了压力和化学势来描述这些相,将活性物质理论扩展到宏观动物的聚集,并为集体动物群体的热力学描述奠定基础。