ICTS:31636

Velocity Distribution and Diffusion of an Athermal Inertial Run-and-Tumble Particle in a Shear-Thinning Medium

APA

(2025). Velocity Distribution and Diffusion of an Athermal Inertial Run-and-Tumble Particle in a Shear-Thinning Medium. SciVideos. https://youtu.be/jZwBjPho3ls

MLA

Velocity Distribution and Diffusion of an Athermal Inertial Run-and-Tumble Particle in a Shear-Thinning Medium. SciVideos, Apr. 22, 2025, https://youtu.be/jZwBjPho3ls

BibTex

          @misc{ scivideos_ICTS:31636,
            doi = {},
            url = {https://youtu.be/jZwBjPho3ls},
            author = {},
            keywords = {},
            language = {en},
            title = {Velocity Distribution and Diffusion of an Athermal Inertial Run-and-Tumble Particle in a Shear-Thinning Medium},
            publisher = {},
            year = {2025},
            month = {apr},
            note = {ICTS:31636 see, \url{https://scivideos.org/index.php/icts-tifr/31636}}
          }
          
Prasenjit Das
Talk numberICTS:31636

Abstract

We study the dynamics of an athermal inertial active particle moving in a shear-thinning medium in $d=1$. The viscosity of the medium is modeled using a Coulomb-tanh function, while the activity is represented by an asymmetric dichotomous noise with strengths $-\Delta$ and $\mu\Delta$, transitioning between these states at a rate $\lambda$. Starting from the Fokker-Planck~(FP) equation for the time-dependent probability distributions $P(v,-\Delta,t)$ and $P(v,\mu\Delta,t)$ of the particle's velocity $v$ at time $t$, moving under the influence of active forces $-\Delta$ and $\mu\Delta$ respectively, we analytically derive the steady-state velocity distribution function $P_s(v)$, explicitly dependent on $\mu$. Also, we obtain a quadrature expression for the effective diffusion coefficient $D_e$ for the symmetric active force case~($\mu=1$). For a given $\Delta$ and $\mu$, we show that $P_s(v)$ exhibits multiple transitions as $\lambda$ is varied. Subsequently, we numerically compute $P_s(v)$, the mean-squared velocity $\langle v^2\rangle(t)$, and the diffusion coefficient $D_e$ by solving the particle's equation of motion, all of which show excellent agreement with the analytical results in the steady-state. Finally, we examine the universal nature of the transitions in $P_s(v)$ by considering an alternative functional form of medium's viscosity that also capture the shear-thinning behavior.