6,936 research outputs found

    A First-Order Dynamical Transition in the displacement distribution of a Driven Run-and-Tumble Particle

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    We study the probability distribution P(XN=X,N)P(X_N=X,N) of the total displacement XNX_N of an NN-step run and tumble particle on a line, in presence of a constant nonzero drive EE. While the central limit theorem predicts a standard Gaussian form for P(X,N)P(X,N) near its peak, we show that for large positive and negative XX, the distribution exhibits anomalous large deviation forms. For large positive XX, the associated rate function is nonanalytic at a critical value of the scaled distance from the peak where its first derivative is discontinuous. This signals a first-order dynamical phase transition from a homogeneous `fluid' phase to a `condensed' phase that is dominated by a single large run. A similar first-order transition occurs for negative large fluctuations as well. Numerical simulations are in excellent agreement with our analytical predictions.Comment: 35 pages, 5 figures. An algebraic error in Appendix B of the previous version of the manuscript has been corrected. A new argument for the location zcz_c of the transition is reported in Appendix B.

    Maximum Distance Between the Leader and the Laggard for Three Brownian Walkers

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    We consider three independent Brownian walkers moving on a line. The process terminates when the left-most walker (the `Leader') meets either of the other two walkers. For arbitrary values of the diffusion constants D_1 (the Leader), D_2 and D_3 of the three walkers, we compute the probability distribution P(m|y_2,y_3) of the maximum distance m between the Leader and the current right-most particle (the `Laggard') during the process, where y_2 and y_3 are the initial distances between the leader and the other two walkers. The result has, for large m, the form P(m|y_2,y_3) \sim A(y_2,y_3) m^{-\delta}, where \delta = (2\pi-\theta)/(\pi-\theta) and \theta = cos^{-1}(D_1/\sqrt{(D_1+D_2)(D_1+D_3)}. The amplitude A(y_2,y_3) is also determined exactly

    Residence time statistics for NN blinking quantum dots and other stochastic processes

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    We present a study of residence time statistics for NN blinking quantum dots. With numerical simulations and exact calculations we show sharp transitions for a critical number of dots. In contrast to expectation the fluctuations in the limit of N→∞N \to \infty are non-trivial. Besides quantum dots our work describes residence time statistics in several other many particle systems for example NN Brownian particles. Our work provides a natural framework to detect non-ergodic kinetics from measurements of many blinking chromophores, without the need to reach the single molecule limit
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