Dynamical Facilitation in Active Glass Formers: Role of Morphology and Persistence

Abstract

Understanding dynamical facilitation in nonequilibrium glass-forming systems driven by active forces remains an open challenge. In particular, it is unclear whether facilitation survives in active glasses, where persistent self-propulsion breaks detailed balance and introduces directional memory. Here, we use large-scale simulations of a two-dimensional athermal Ornstein-Uhlenbeck particle model to investigate how persistent active forcing modifies cooperative relaxation. We analyze the morphology of cooperatively rearranging regions (CRRs) and the spatial transport of mobility excitations. A spatially resolved core-shell decomposition reveals distinct responses of the core and shell to activity: the core undergoes global morphological changes while retaining internal plasticity, whereas the shell acts as a rigid scaffold that supports primarily axial deformation and facilitates transport. Dynamical observables, including modal displacement, shell occupation probability, and facilitation length, exhibit a pronounced non-monotonic dependence on persistence time. This behavior reflects the competition between persistence and effective noise, leading to either coherent or trapping-dominated dynamics at large persistence, depending on temperature. Despite significant morphological changes, the facilitation length shows an approximate scaling collapse when rescaled by the persistence length, lp=Teffτp. This is consistent with a diffusive-like time-length coupling, fac τα1/2, indicating that activity reshapes facilitation pathways without altering their large-scale transport character. Our results support a generalized facilitation framework for active glass formers.

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