Suspensions of motile active particles with space-dependent activity form characteristic polarization and density patterns. Recent single-particle studies for planar activity landscapes identified several quantities associated with emergent density-polarization patterns that are solely determined by bulk variables.
Naive thermodynamic intuition suggests that these results might hold for arbitrary activity landscapes mediating bulk regions, and thus could be used as benchmarks for simulations and theories. However, the considered system operates in a nonequilibrium steady state and we prove by construction that the quantities in question lose their simple form for curved activity landscapes.
Specifically, we provide a detailed analytical study of polarization and density profiles induced by radially symmetric activity steps, and of the total polarization for the case of a general radially symmetric activity landscape. While the qualitative picture is similar to the planar case, all the investigated variables depend not only on bulk variables but also comprise geometry-induced contributions.
We verified that all our analytical results agree with exact numerical calculations.