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Scaling behavior of nonequilibrium measures in internally driven elastic assemblies.

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Detecting and quantifying nonequilibrium activity is essential for studying internally driven assemblies, including synthetic active matter and complex living systems such as cells or tissue. We discuss a noninvasive approach… Click to show full abstract

Detecting and quantifying nonequilibrium activity is essential for studying internally driven assemblies, including synthetic active matter and complex living systems such as cells or tissue. We discuss a noninvasive approach of measuring nonequilibrium behavior based on the breaking of detailed balance. We focus on "cycling frequencies"-the average frequency with which the trajectories of pairs of degrees of freedom revolve in phase space-and explain their connection with other nonequilibrium measures, including the area enclosing rate and the entropy production rate. We test our approach on simple toy models composed of elastic networks immersed in a viscous fluid with site-dependent internal driving. We prove both numerically and analytically that the cycling frequencies obey a power law as a function of distance between the tracked degrees of freedom. Importantly, the behavior of the cycling frequencies contains information about the dimensionality of the system and the amplitude of active noise. The mapping we use in our analytical approach thus offers a convenient framework for predicting the behavior of two-point nonequilibrium measures for a given activity distribution in the network.

Keywords: cycling frequencies; behavior nonequilibrium; nonequilibrium measures; nonequilibrium; internally driven; scaling behavior

Journal Title: Physical review. E
Year Published: 2019

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