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We derive a mode-coupling theory (MCT) to describe the dynamics of tracer particles in dense systems of active Brownian particles (ABPs) in two spatial dimensions. The ABP undergo translational and rotational Brownian dynamics, and are equipped with a fixed self-propulsion speed along their orientational vector that describes their active motility. The resulting equations of motion for the tagged-particle density correlation functions describe the various cases of tracer dynamics close to the glass transition: that of a passive colloidal particle in a suspension of ABP, that of a single active particle in a glass-forming passive host suspensions, and that of active tracers in a bath of active particles. Numerical results are presented for these cases assuming hard-sphere interactions among the particles. The qualitative and quantitative accuracy of the theory is tested against event-driven Brownian dynamics (ED-BD) simulations of active and passive hard disks. Simulation and theory are found in quantitative agreement, provided one adjusts the overall density (as known from the passive description of glassy dynamics), and allows for a rescaling of self-propulsion velocities in the active host system. These adjustments account for the fact that ABP-MCT generally overestimates the tendency for kinetic arrest. We also confirm in the simulations a peculiar feature of the transient and stationary dynamical density correlation functions regarding their lack of symmetry under time reversal, demonstrating the non-equilibrium nature of the system and how it manifests itself in the theory.
Generalized mode-coupling theory (GMCT) has recently emerged as a promising first-principles theory to study the poorly understood dynamics of glass-forming materials. Formulated as a hierarchical extension of standard mode-coupling theory (MCT), it
We discuss recent advances in developing a mode-coupling theory of the glass transition (MCT) of two-dimensional systems of active Brownian particles (ABP). We specifically discuss the case of a single ABP tracer in a glass-forming passive host suspe
Frictional forces affect the rheology of hard-sphere colloids, at high shear rate. Here we demonstrate, via numerical simulations, that they also affect the dynamics of active Brownian particles, and their motility induced phase separation. Frictiona
Recent experimental studies have demonstrated that cellular motion can be directed by topographical gradients, such as those resulting from spatial variations in the features of a micropatterned substrate. This phenomenon, known as topotaxis, is espe
Combining experiments on active colloids, whose propulsion velocity can be controlled via a feedback loop, and theory of active Brownian motion, we explore the dynamics of an overdamped active particle with a motility that depends explicitly on the p