Emergent motion patterns of delay-coupled swarms
ORAL
Abstract
Emergent pattern-forming behaviours of aggregates of interacting autonomous agents are a topic of great interest in complex systems research, with applications including biology, environmental monitoring, and defence. We model, and experimentally verify, pattern formation in a swarm of delay-coupled agents, using a simple but general model of agent interactions. Using mean-field dynamics, we perform a thorough analytical study of the bifurcation structure as a function of network connectivity and delay to describe the emergence of pattern formation. We show that swarm motion patterns observed for a homogeneous swarm with all-to-all communication are robust to decreasing network connectivity and to heterogeneity in the parameters governing individual agent behaviours. We perform systematic numerical studies to show where the mean-field theory deviates from simulation and experiment.
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Authors
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Klementyna Szwaykowska
U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Code 6792, Plasma Physics Division
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Luis Mier-y-Teran-Romero
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
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Ira Schwartz
U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Naval Research Lab, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Code 6792, Plasma Physics Division, US Naval Research Laboratory