- Series
- Applied and Computational Mathematics Seminar
- Time
- Monday, November 16, 2015 - 2:05pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Gil Ariel – Bar-Ilan University
- Organizer
- Seong Jun Kim
Collective
movement is one of the most prevailing observations in nature. Yet, despite
considerable progress, many of the theoretical principles underlying the
emergence of large scale synchronization among moving individuals are still
poorly understood. For example, a key question in the study of animal motion is
how the details of locomotion, interaction between individuals and the environment
contribute to the macroscopic dynamics of the hoard, flock or swarm. The
talk will present some of the prevailing models for swarming and collective
motion with emphasis on stochastic descriptions. The goal is to identify some generic characteristics
regarding the build-up and maintenance of collective order in swarms. In
particular, whether order and disorder correspond to different phases,
requiring external environmental changes to induce a transition, or rather meta-stable
states of the dynamics, suggesting that the emergence of order is kinetic.
Different aspects of the phenomenon will be presented, from experiments with locusts
to our own attempts towards a statistical physics of collective motion.