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Hauptverfasser: Nguyen, Minh D. N., Pham, Phuc H., Ngo, Khang V., Do, Van H., Li, Shengkai, Phan, Trung V.
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2023
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.02735
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author Nguyen, Minh D. N.
Pham, Phuc H.
Ngo, Khang V.
Do, Van H.
Li, Shengkai
Phan, Trung V.
author_facet Nguyen, Minh D. N.
Pham, Phuc H.
Ngo, Khang V.
Do, Van H.
Li, Shengkai
Phan, Trung V.
contents Chemotactic active particles, such as bacteria and cells, exhibit an adaptive run-and-tumble motion, giving rise to complex emergent behaviors in response to external chemical fields. This motion is generated by the conversion of internal chemical energy into self-propulsion, allowing each agent to sustain a steady-state far from thermal equilibrium and perform works. The rate of entropy production serves as an indicates of how extensive these agents operate away from thermal equilibrium, providing a measure for estimating maximum obtainable power. Here we present the general framework for calculating the entropy production rate created by such population of agents from the first principle, using the minimal model of bacterial adaptive chemotaxis, as they execute the most basic collective action -- the mass transport.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2311_02735
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Remark on the Entropy Production of Adaptive Run-and-Tumble Chemotaxis
Nguyen, Minh D. N.
Pham, Phuc H.
Ngo, Khang V.
Do, Van H.
Li, Shengkai
Phan, Trung V.
Soft Condensed Matter
Biological Physics
Chemotactic active particles, such as bacteria and cells, exhibit an adaptive run-and-tumble motion, giving rise to complex emergent behaviors in response to external chemical fields. This motion is generated by the conversion of internal chemical energy into self-propulsion, allowing each agent to sustain a steady-state far from thermal equilibrium and perform works. The rate of entropy production serves as an indicates of how extensive these agents operate away from thermal equilibrium, providing a measure for estimating maximum obtainable power. Here we present the general framework for calculating the entropy production rate created by such population of agents from the first principle, using the minimal model of bacterial adaptive chemotaxis, as they execute the most basic collective action -- the mass transport.
title Remark on the Entropy Production of Adaptive Run-and-Tumble Chemotaxis
topic Soft Condensed Matter
Biological Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.02735