Giant number fluctuations in dry active polar fluids: A shocking analogy with lightning rods
Abstract: The hydrodynamic equations of dry active polar fluids (i.e., moving flocks without momentum conservation) are shown to imply giant number fluctuations. Specifically, the rms fluctuations $\sqrt {<(\delta N)2>}$ of the number $N$ of active particles in a region containing a mean number of active particles $<N>$ scales according to the law $\sqrt {<(\delta N)2>} = K'<N>{\phi(d)}$ with $\phi(d)=\frac{7}{10}+\frac{1}{5d}$ in $d\le4$ spatial dimensions. This is much larger the "law of large numbers" scaling $\sqrt {<(\delta N)2>} = K\sqrt{<N>}$ found in most equilibrium and non-equilibrium systems. In further contrast to most other systems, the coefficient $K'$ also depends singularly on the shape of the box in which one counts the particles, vanishing in the limit of very thin boxes. These fluctuations arise {\it not} from large density fluctuations - indeed, the density fluctuations in \dry s are not in general particularly large - but from long ranged spatial correlations between those fluctuations. These are shown to be closely related in two spatial dimensions to the electrostatic potential near a sharp upward pointing conducting wedge of opening angle ${3\pi\over8}=67.5\circ$, and in three dimensions to the electrostatic potential near a sharp upward pointing charged cone of opening angle $37.16\circ$. This very precise prediction can be stringently tested by alternative box counting experiments that directly measure this density-density correlation function.
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