Physicists model bird flocks using imaginary partners to explain non-reciprocal interactions

Researchers have developed a new theoretical framework that allows accurate simulations of systems like bird flocks, which appear to violate Newton's third law of motion. The approach introduces fictitious partners to transform non-reciprocal interactions into reciprocal ones that existing methods can handle.

Birds in flocks align only with neighbors ahead or beside them, creating interactions that seem to break the action-reaction principle central to classical physics for over 300 years. Similar patterns appear in bacterial swarms and cell groups, where traditional models fall short.

A team led by Marín Bukov at Technische Universität Dresden, working with Roderich Moessner and Ricard Alert, introduced auxiliary mathematical variables representing imaginary partners. For each bird, they place a fictitious counterpart in the opposite direction to restore balance in the equations.

"The trick behind the new theory is that it constructs a partner for each component of the system -- a fictitious partner that doesn't exist in nature," Alert explained. The method enables precise simulations using established many-body physics tools.

The findings, published in Nature Physics, open possibilities for studying collective behavior in both biological and quantum systems. Moessner noted the potential for discovering new forms of quantum matter arising from such non-reciprocal dynamics.

Liittyvät artikkelit

Lab scene depicting contactless magnetic friction discovery: hovering metallic blocks with magnetic fields and graphs breaking Amontons' law.
AI:n luoma kuva

Researchers discover contactless magnetic friction

Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva

Scientists at the University of Konstanz have identified a new type of sliding friction that occurs without physical contact, driven by magnetic interactions. This phenomenon breaks Amontons' law, a 300-year-old physics principle, by showing friction peaks at certain distances rather than increasing steadily with load. The findings appear in Nature Materials.

Physicists at New York University have developed a new type of time crystal using sound waves to suspend tiny styrofoam beads, resulting in nonreciprocal interactions that defy Newton's third law of motion. The compact, visible system oscillates in a steady rhythm and was detailed in Physical Review Letters. Researchers suggest potential applications in quantum computing and insights into biological rhythms.

Raportoinut AI

Researchers at the University of Oxford have generated a new family of quantum superpositions using nonclassical components in a trapped ion system. The work demonstrates programmable control over exotic motional states and could advance quantum technologies.

Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory have developed a method to effectively reverse time in quantum systems, enabling energy harvesting for potential use in quantum batteries. The technique counteracts the effects of measurements on qubits, making systems appear to run backwards. This could turn measurements into a thermodynamic resource.

Raportoinut AI

An international team of physicists has found that quantum collapse models, potentially linked to gravity, introduce a minuscule uncertainty in time itself. This sets a fundamental limit on clock precision, though far below current detection levels. The research, published in Physical Review Research, explores ties between quantum mechanics and gravity.

New supercomputer models indicate that magnetic fields enable two protostars to form a close binary system by removing angular momentum from the surrounding gas.

Raportoinut AI

Researchers have tracked the eye movements of pigeons in flight for the first time. The birds fix their gaze after takeoff rather than scanning their surroundings.

Tämä verkkosivusto käyttää evästeitä

Käytämme evästeitä analyysiä varten parantaaksemme sivustoamme. Lue tietosuojakäytäntömme tietosuojakäytäntö lisätietoja varten.
Hylkää