We investigate the amplitude of mesoscopic fluctuations of the differential
conductance of a metallic wire at arbitrary bias voltage V. For non-interacting
electrons, the variance increases with V. The asymptotic large-V
behavior is \sim V/V_c (where eV_c=D/L^2 is the Thouless energy),
in agreement with the earlier prediction by Larkin and Khmelnitskii. We find,
however, that this asymptotics has a very small numerical prefactor and sets in
at very large V/V_c only, which strongly complicates its experimental
observation. This high-voltage behavior is preceded by a crossover regime,
V/V_c \lesssim 30, where the conductance variance increases by a factor \sim 3
as compared to its value in the regime of universal conductance fluctuations
(i.e., at V->0). We further analyze the effect of dephasing due to the
electron-electron scattering on at high voltages. With the Coulomb
interaction taken into account, the amplitude of conductance fluctuations
becomes a non-monotonic function of V. Specifically, drops as 1/V
for voltages V >> gV_c, where g is the dimensionless conductance. In this
regime, the conductance fluctuations are dominated by quantum-coherent regions
of the wire adjacent to the reservoirs.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. Fig.2 and one more appendix added, accepted for
publication in PR