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Aggregation Pattern Transitions by Slightly Varying the Attractive/Repulsive Function

Hai‐Tao Zhang, Michael Z. Q. Chen, Tao Zhou, Najl V. Valeyev

Year
2011
Citations
20
Access
Open access

Abstract

Among collective behaviors of biological swarms and flocks, the attractive/repulsive (A/R) functional links between particles play an important role. By slightly changing the cutoff distance of the A/R function, a drastic transition between two distinct aggregation patterns is observed. More precisely, a large cutoff distance yields a liquid-like aggregation pattern where the particle density decreases monotonously from the inside to the outwards within each aggregated cluster. Conversely, a small cutoff distance produces a crystal-like aggregation pattern where the distance between each pair of neighboring particles remains constant. Significantly, there is an obvious spinodal in the variance curve of the inter-particle distances along the increasing cutoff distances, implying a legible transition pattern between the liquid-like and crystal-like aggregations. This work bridges the aggregation phenomena of physical particles and swarming of organisms in nature upon revealing some common mechanism behind them by slightly varying their inter-individual attractive/repulsive functions, and may find its potential engineering applications, for example, in the formation design of multi-robot systems and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

Keywords

CutoffCollective behaviorCluster (spacecraft)PhysicsSwarming (honey bee)Chemical physicsFunction (biology)Collective motionSpinodalPhase transition

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