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Role of Translational Noise in Motility-Induced Phase Separation of Hard Active Particles

Published 22 May 2025 in cond-mat.soft and cond-mat.stat-mech | (2505.16536v1)

Abstract: Self-propelled particles, like motile cells and artificial colloids, can spontaneously form macroscopic clusters. This phenomenon is called motility-induced phase separation (MIPS) and occurs even without attractive forces, provided that the self-propulsion direction fluctuates slowly. In addition to rotational noise, these particles may experience translational noise, not coupled to rotational noise, due to environmental fluctuations. We study the role of translational noise in the clustering of active Brownian hard disks. To tease apart the contribution of translational noise, we model excluded-volume interactions through a Monte-Carlo-like overlap rejection approach. Upon increasing the translational diffusivity, we find that clusters become more rounded (less fractal), eventually transitioning to genuine MIPS. For sufficiently higher translational diffusivity, clusters melt down. We develop a theory for the cluster mass distribution, and employ a hydrodynamic approach with parameters taken from the simulation, that explains the clustering phase diagram.

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