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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 particle orientation. In this case, the active particle moves faster when oriented along one direction and slower when oriented along another, leading to an anisotropic translational dynamics which is coupled to the particles rotational diffusion. We propose a basic model of active Brownian motion for orientation-dependent motility. Based on this model, we obtain analytic results for the mean trajectories, averaged over the Brownian noise for various initial configurations, and for the mean-square displacements including their anisotropic non-Gaussian behavior. The theoretical results are found to be in good agreement with the experimental data. Our findings establish a methodology to engineer complex anisotropic motilities of active Brownian particles, with potential impact in the study of the swimming behavior of microorganisms subjected to anisotropic driving fields.
We have developed a lab work module where we teach undergraduate students how to quantify the dynamics of a suspension of microscopic particles, measuring and analyzing the motion of those particles at the individual level or as a group. Differential
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
We review recent advances in rectification control of artificial microswimmers, also known as Janus particles, diffusing along narrow, periodically corrugated channels. The swimmer self-propulsion mechanism is modeled so as to incorporate a nonzero t
Using computer simulations and dynamic mean-field theory, we demonstrate that fast enough rotation of circle active Brownian particles in two dimensions generates a dynamical clustering state interrupting the conventional motility induced phase separ
We have directly observed short-time stress propagation in viscoelastic fluids using two optically trapped particles and a fast interferometric particle-tracking technique. We have done this both by recording correlations in the thermal motion of the