2,846 research outputs found
Weak disorder: anomalous transport and diffusion are normal yet again
Particles driven through a periodic potential by an external constant force
are known to exhibit a pronounced peak of the diffusion around a critical force
that defines the transition between locked and running states. It has recently
been shown both experimentally and numerically that this peak is greatly
enhanced if some amount of spatial disorder is superimposed on the periodic
potential. Here we show that beyond a simple enhancement lies a much more
interesting phenomenology. For some parameter regimes the system exhibits a
rich variety of behaviors from normal diffusion to superdiffusion, subdiffusion
and even subtransport.Comment: Substantial improvements in presentatio
The subdiffusive target problem: Survival probability
The asymptotic survival probability of a spherical target in the presence of
a single subdiffusive trap or surrounded by a sea of subdiffusive traps in a
continuous Euclidean medium is calculated. In one and two dimensions the
survival probability of the target in the presence of a single trap decays to
zero as a power law and as a power law with logarithmic correction,
respectively. The target is thus reached with certainty, but it takes the trap
an infinite time on average to do so. In three dimensions a single trap may
never reach the target and so the survival probability is finite and, in fact,
does not depend on whether the traps move diffusively or subdiffusively. When
the target is surrounded by a sea of traps, on the other hand, its survival
probability decays as a stretched exponential in all dimensions (with a
logarithmic correction in the exponent for ). A trap will therefore reach
the target with certainty, and will do so in a finite time. These results may
be directly related to enzyme binding kinetics on DNA in the crowded cellular
environment.Comment: 6 pages. References added, improved account of previous results and
typos correcte
On the Generalized Kramers Problem with Oscillatory Memory Friction
The time-dependent transmission coefficient for the Kramers problem exhibits
different behaviors in different parameter regimes. In the high friction regime
it decays monotonically ("non-adiabatic"), and in the low friction regime it
decays in an oscillatory fashion ("energy-diffusion-limited"). The generalized
Kramers problem with an exponential memory friction exhibits an additional
oscillatory behavior in the high friction regime ("caging"). In this paper we
consider an oscillatory memory kernel, which can be associated with a model in
which the reaction coordinate is linearly coupled to a nonreactive coordinate,
which is in turn coupled to a heat bath. We recover the non-adiabatic and
energy-diffusion-limited behaviors of the transmission coefficient in
appropriate parameter regimes, and find that caging is not observed with an
oscillatory memory kernel. Most interestingly, we identify a new regime in
which the time-dependent transmission coefficient decays via a series of rather
sharp steps followed by plateaus ("stair-like"). We explain this regime and its
dependence on the various parameters of the system
An analytical approach to sorting in periodic potentials
There has been a recent revolution in the ability to manipulate
micrometer-sized objects on surfaces patterned by traps or obstacles of
controllable configurations and shapes. One application of this technology is
to separate particles driven across such a surface by an external force
according to some particle characteristic such as size or index of refraction.
The surface features cause the trajectories of particles driven across the
surface to deviate from the direction of the force by an amount that depends on
the particular characteristic, thus leading to sorting. While models of this
behavior have provided a good understanding of these observations, the
solutions have so far been primarily numerical. In this paper we provide
analytic predictions for the dependence of the angle between the direction of
motion and the external force on a number of model parameters for periodic as
well as random surfaces. We test these predictions against exact numerical
simulations
Escape of a Uniform Random Walk from an Interval
We study the first-passage properties of a random walk in the unit interval
in which the length of a single step is uniformly distributed over the finite
range [-a,a]. For a of the order of one, the exit probabilities to each edge of
the interval and the exit time from the interval exhibit anomalous properties
stemming from the change in the minimum number of steps to escape the interval
as a function of the starting point. As a decreases, first-passage properties
approach those of continuum diffusion, but non-diffusive effects remain because
of residual discreteness effectsComment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 2 column revtex4 forma
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