Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA.
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USA.
Nat Commun. 2023 Feb 20;14(1):940. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-36563-4.
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.
我们研究了一群群趋同耦合振荡器(称为 swarmalators)的涌现行为。之前的工作考虑了最简单、理想化的情况:具有全局耦合的相同 swarmalators。在这里,我们通过添加更现实的特征来扩展这项工作:局部耦合、不同的自然频率和手性。这个更现实的模型产生了各种新的行为,包括涡旋晶格、拍动簇和相互作用的相波。类似的行为在自然和人工微观集体系统中都有发现,包括社会性粘菌、精子涡旋阵列和昆克滚轮。我们的结果表明,未来有广泛的应用案例,既可以帮助对自然群体进行特征描述和理解,也可以设计从软物质和活性物质到微型机器人等复杂的集体系统中的相互作用。