186 research outputs found
Anisotropic Random Networks of Semiflexible Polymers
Motivated by the organization of crosslinked cytoskeletal biopolymers, we
present a semimicroscopic replica field theory for the formation of anisotropic
random networks of semiflexible polymers. The networks are formed by
introducing random permanent crosslinks which fix the orientations of the
corresponding polymer segments to align with one another. Upon increasing the
crosslink density, we obtain a continuous gelation transition from a fluid
phase to a gel where a finite fraction of the system gets localized at random
positions. For sufficiently stiff polymers, this positional localization is
accompanied by a {\em continuous} isotropic-to-nematic (IN) transition occuring
at the same crosslink density. As the polymer stiffness decreases, the IN
transition becomes first order, shifts to a higher crosslink density, and is
preceeded by an orientational glass (statistically isotropic amorphous solid)
where the average polymer orientations freeze in random directions.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; final version with expanded discussion to appear
in PR
Linear response of a grafted semiflexible polymer to a uniform force field
We use the worm-like chain model to analytically calculate the linear
response of a grafted semiflexible polymer to a uniform force field. The result
is a function of the bending stiffness, the temperature, the total contour
length, and the orientation of the field with respect to that of the grafted
end. We also study the linear response of a worm-like chain with a periodic
alternating sequence of positive and negative charges. This can be considered
as a model for a polyampholyte with intrinsic bending siffness and negligible
intramolecular interactions. We show how the finite intrinsic persistence
length affects the linear response to the external field.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem for the Microcanonical Ensemble
A derivation of the Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem for the microcanonical
ensemble is presented using linear response theory. The theorem is stated as a
relation between the frequency spectra of the symmetric correlation and
response functions. When the system is not in the thermodinamic limit, this
result can be viewed as an extension of the fluctuation-dissipation relations
to a situation where dynamical fluctuations determine the response. Therefore,
the relation presented here between equilibrium fluctuations and response can
have a very different physical nature from the usual one in the canonical
ensemble. These considerations imply that the Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem
is not restricted to the context of thermal equilibrium, where it is usually
derived. Dispersion relations and sum rules are also obtained and discussed in
the present case. Although analogous to the Kramers-Kronig relations, they are
not related to the frequency spectrum but to the energy dependence of the
response function.Comment: 15 pages, v3: final version, new text added, new reference
Conformations of confined biopolymers
Nanoscale and microscale confinement of biopolymers naturally occurs in cells
and has been recently achieved in artificial structures designed for
nanotechnological applications. Here, we present an extensive theoretical
investigation of the conformations and shape of a biopolymer with varying
stiffness confined to a narrow channel. Combining scaling arguments, analytical
calculations, and Monte Carlo simulations, we identify various scaling regimes
where master curves quantify the functional dependence of the polymer
conformations on the chain stiffness and strength of confinement.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, minor correction
New Universality of Lyapunov Spectra in Hamiltonian Systems
A new universality of Lyapunov spectra {\lambda_i} is shown for Hamiltonian
systems. The universality appears in middle energy regime and is different from
another universality which can be reproduced by random matrices in the
following two points. One is that the new universality appears in a limited
range of large i/N rather than the whole range, where N is degrees of freedom.
The other is Lyapunov spectra do not behave linearly while random matrices give
linear behavior even on 3D lattice. Quadratic terms with smaller nonlinear
terms of potential functions play an intrinsic role in the new universality.Comment: 19 pages, 16 Encapsulated Postscript figures, LaTeX (100 kb
Tension dynamics in semiflexible polymers. Part I: Coarse-grained equations of motion
Based on the wormlike chain model, a coarse-grained description of the
nonlinear dynamics of a weakly bending semiflexible polymer is developed. By
means of a multiple scale perturbation analysis, a length-scale separation
inherent to the weakly-bending limit is exploited to reveal the deterministic
nature of the spatio-temporal relaxation of the backbone tension and to deduce
the corresponding coarse-grained equation of motion. From this partial
integro-differential equation, some detailed analytical predictions for the
non-linear response of a weakly bending polymer are derived in an accompanying
paper (Part II, cond-mat/0609638).Comment: 14 pages, 4 figyres. The second part of this article has the preprint
no.: cond-mat/060963
Transverse fluctuations of grafted polymers
We study the statistical mechanics of grafted polymers of arbitrary stiffness
in a two-dimensional embedding space with Monte Carlo simulations. The
probability distribution function of the free end is found to be highly
anisotropic and non-Gaussian for typical semiflexible polymers. The reduced
distribution in the transverse direction, a Gaussian in the stiff and flexible
limits, shows a double peak structure at intermediate stiffnesses. We also
explore the response to a transverse force applied at the polymer free end. We
identify F-Actin as an ideal benchmark for the effects discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review
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