Żukowski Stanisław, Cornelissen Annemiek Johanna Maria, Osselin Florian, Douady Stéphane, Szymczak Piotr
Institute of Theoretical Physics, Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw, Warsaw 02-093, Poland.
Laboratoire Matière et Systèmes Complexes, UMR 7057, CNRS & Université Paris Cité, Paris 75013, France.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Jul 16;121(29):e2401200121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2401200121. Epub 2024 Jul 10.
Transport networks, such as vasculature or river networks, provide key functions in organisms and the environment. They usually contain loops whose significance for the stability and robustness of the network is well documented. However, the dynamics of their formation is usually not considered. Such structures often grow in response to the gradient of an external field. During evolution, extending branches compete for the available flux of the field, which leads to effective repulsion between them and screening of the shorter ones. Yet, in remarkably diverse processes, from unstable fluid flows to the canal system of jellyfish, loops suddenly form near the breakthrough when the longest branch reaches the boundary of the system. We provide a physical explanation for this universal behavior. Using a 1D model, we explain that the appearance of effective attractive forces results from the field drop inside the leading finger as it approaches the outlet. Furthermore, we numerically study the interactions between two fingers, including screening in the system and its disappearance near the breakthrough. Finally, we perform simulations of the temporal evolution of the fingers to show how revival and attraction to the longest finger leads to dynamic loop formation. We compare the simulations to the experiments and find that the dynamics of the shorter finger are well reproduced. Our results demonstrate that reconnection is a prevalent phenomenon in systems driven by diffusive fluxes, occurring both when the ratio of the mobility inside the growing structure to the mobility outside is low and near the breakthrough.
运输网络,如脉管系统或河网,在生物体和环境中发挥着关键作用。它们通常包含回路,回路对网络稳定性和稳健性的重要性已有充分记载。然而,回路形成的动力学通常未被考虑。此类结构往往会响应外部场的梯度而生长。在进化过程中,延伸的分支会争夺场的可用通量,这导致它们之间产生有效排斥,并使较短的分支被筛选掉。然而,在从不稳定的流体流动到水母运河系统等极为多样的过程中,当最长的分支到达系统边界时,回路会在突破点附近突然形成。我们为这种普遍行为提供了一种物理解释。通过一个一维模型,我们解释了有效吸引力的出现是由于前沿指状物接近出口时其内部的场强下降。此外,我们对两个指状物之间的相互作用进行了数值研究,包括系统中的筛选作用及其在突破点附近的消失。最后,我们对指状物的时间演化进行了模拟,以展示较短指状物的复苏以及对最长指状物的吸引如何导致动态回路的形成。我们将模拟结果与实验进行了比较,发现较短指状物的动力学得到了很好的再现。我们的结果表明,重新连接是由扩散通量驱动的系统中的一种普遍现象,在生长结构内部的迁移率与外部迁移率之比很低时以及在突破点附近都会发生。