Viscoelastic confinement induces periodic flow reversals in active nematics
ArXiv 2307.14919 (2023)
Current fluctuations in stochastically resetting particle systems
Physical Review E American Physical Society 108:1-1 (2023) 14112
Abstract:
We consider a system of noninteracting particles on a line with initial positions distributed uniformly with density ρ on the negative half-line. We consider two different models: (i) Each particle performs independent Brownian motion with stochastic resetting to its initial position with rate r and (ii) each particle performs run-and-tumble motion, and with rate r its position gets reset to its initial value and simultaneously its velocity gets randomized. We study the effects of resetting on the distribution P(Q,t) of the integrated particle current Q up to time t through the origin (from left to right). We study both the annealed and the quenched current distributions and in both cases, we find that resetting induces a stationary limiting distribution of the current at long times. However, we show that the approach to the stationary state of the current distribution in the annealed and the quenched cases are drastically different for both models. In the annealed case, the whole distribution P_{an}(Q,t) approaches its stationary limit uniformly for all Q. In contrast, the quenched distribution P_{qu}(Q,t) attains its stationary form for Q<Q_{crit}(t), while it remains time dependent for Q>Q_{crit}(t). We show that Q_{crit}(t) increases linearly with t for large t. On the scale where Q∼Q_{crit}(t), we show that P_{qu}(Q,t) has an unusual large deviation form with a rate function that has a third-order phase transition at the critical point. We have computed the associated rate functions analytically for both models. Using an importance sampling method that allows to probe probabilities as tiny as 10^{-14000}, we were able to compute numerically this nonanalytic rate function for the resetting Brownian dynamics and found excellent agreement with our analytical prediction.Cost of Diffusion: Nonlinearity and Giant Fluctuations.
Physical review letters 130:23 (2023) 237102
Abstract:
We introduce a simple model of diffusive jump process where a fee is charged for each jump. The nonlinear cost function is such that slow jumps incur a flat fee, while for fast jumps the cost is proportional to the velocity of the jump. The model-inspired by the way taxi meters work-exhibits a very rich behavior. The cost for trajectories of equal length and equal duration exhibits giant fluctuations at a critical value of the scaled distance traveled. Furthermore, the full distribution of the cost until the target is reached exhibits an interesting "freezing" transition in the large-deviation regime. All the analytical results are corroborated by numerical simulations. Our results also apply to elastic systems near the depinning transition, when driven by a random force.Entropy production of resetting processes
Physical Review Research American Physical Society (APS) 5:2 (2023) 023103
Resetting in stochastic optimal control
Physical Review Research American Physical Society (APS) 5:1 (2023) 013122