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|a Rohwer, Christian M.
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
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|a Solon, Alexandre
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|a Kardar, Mehran
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|a Solon, Alexandre
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|a Kardar, Mehran
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|a Krüger, Matthias
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|a Nonequilibrium forces following quenches in active and thermal matter
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|b American Physical Society,
|c 2018-04-10T19:53:40Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/114655
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|a Nonequilibrium systems with conserved quantities like density or momentum are known to exhibit long-ranged correlations. This, in turn, leads to long-ranged fluctuation-induced (Casimir) forces, predicted to arise in a variety of nonequilibrium settings. Here, we study such forces, which arise transiently between parallel plates or compact inclusions in a gas of particles, following a change ("quench") in temperature or activity of the medium. Analytical calculations, as well as numerical simulations of passive or active Brownian particles, indicate two distinct forces: (i) The immediate effect of the quench is adsorption or desorption of particles of the medium to the immersed objects, which in turn initiates a front of relaxing (mean) density. This leads to time-dependent density-induced forces. (ii) A long-term effect of the quench is that density fluctuations are modified, manifested as transient (long-ranged) (pair-)correlations that relax diffusively to their (short-ranged) steady-state limit. As a result, transient fluctuation-induced forces emerge. We discuss the properties of fluctuation-induced and density-induced forces as regards universality, relaxation as a function of time, and scaling with distance between objects. Their distinct signatures allow us to distinguish the two types of forces in simulation data. Our simulations also show that a quench of the effective temperature of an active medium gives rise to qualitatively similar effects to a temperature quench in a passive medium. Based on this insight, we propose several scenarios for the experimental observation of the forces described here.
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|a National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant DMR-1708280)
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|a en
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|a Article
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|t Physical Review E
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