Motility-induced phase separation (MIPS) is a paradigmatic nonequilibrium transition in active matter, determined by the Péclet number and packing fraction. We investigate the single-phase and phase-separated regimes of MIPS using a complex network approach, where networks are constructed from particle interactions over finite time windows. In the single-phase (gas-like) regime, the degree distributions P(k) exhibit Gaussian behavior and resemble those of random graphs. Plotting the location and height of the P(k) peak reveals a universal curve across different Péclet numbers at fixed packing fraction. In the phase-separated regime, we analyze the dense and dilute phases independently. The P(k) distributions unveil distinct collective dynamics, including gas-like behavior in the dense phase and the emergence of active solid-like structures at longer times. Clustering coefficients and average path lengths in both phases stabilize rapidly, indicating that short simulations are sufficient to capture essential network features. Overall, our results show that network metrics expose both universal and phase-specific aspects of active matter dynamics. Notably, we identify distinct and previously unreported topological structures arising in the dense and dilute phases within the MIPS regime.
Contact temporal network during motility-induced phase separation.
Italo Salas,Francisca Guzm'an-Lastra,Denisse Past'en,Ariel Norambuena
Published 2025 in Physical Review E
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- Publication year
2025
- Venue
Physical Review E
- Publication date
2025-06-10
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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