Nonlinear spontaneous flow instability in active nematics
Abstract: Active nematics exhibit spontaneous flows through a well-known linear instability of the uniformly-aligned quiescent state. Here we show that even a linearly stable uniform state can experience a nonlinear instability, resulting in a discontinuous transition to spontaneous flows. In this case, quiescent and flowing states may coexist. Through a weakly nonlinear analysis and a numerical study, we trace the bifurcation diagram of striped patterns and show that the underlying pitchfork bifurcation switches from supercritical (continuous) to subcritical (discontinuous) by varying the flow-alignment parameter. We predict that the discontinuous spontaneous flow transition occurs for a wide range of parameters, including systems of contractile flow-aligning rods. Our predictions are relevant to active nematic turbulence and can potentially be tested in experiments on either cell layers or active cytoskeletal suspensions.
- D. Nishiguchi and M. Sano, Physical Review E 92, 052309 (2015).
- R. A. Simha and S. Ramaswamy, Physical review letters 89, 058101 (2002).
- S. Edwards and J. Yeomans, Europhysics Letters 85, 18008 (2009).
- M. Lenz, Elife 9, e51751 (2020).
- H. Chaté and P. Manneville, Physical review letters 58, 112 (1987).
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.