English

Collective chemotactic search

Soft Condensed Matter 2026-03-03 v2 Statistical Mechanics

Abstract

We investigate collective search by self-propelled agents that are repelled by their own chemically produced trails, a minimal mechanism that simultaneously generates indirect interactions and memory. Using lattice and off-lattice models, we show that this mechanism enhances search efficiency through two distinct regimes. In a weak-memory regime, chemical cues are short-lived and interactions primarily promote spatial separation between agents. This reduces redundant exploration while preserving mobility, leading to an optimal trade-off between spatial order and persistence. In a strong-memory regime, long-lived chemical trails induce effective self-avoidance, strongly suppressing revisits and long search times. Here optimal search occurs at finite memory strength: permanently persistent trails lead to self-caging, while moderate memory enables efficient exploration. At higher densities, overlapping chemical trails give rise to a collective self-avoidance mechanism that yields substantial cooperative speedup without global spatial order. Together, these results show how chemically mediated memory and interactions can optimize collective search across distinct dynamical regimes.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2409.04262,
  title  = {Collective chemotactic search},
  author = {Adam Wysocki and Hugues Meyer and Heiko Rieger},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2409.04262},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

14 pages, 11 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T18:36:28.059Z