Local Time Statistics and Permeable Barrier Crossing: from Poisson to Birth-Death Diffusion Equations
Abstract
Barrier crossing is a widespread phenomenon across natural and engineering systems. While an abundant cross-disciplinary literature on the topic has emerged over the years, the stochastic underpinnings of the process are yet to be fully understood. We fill this knowledge gap by considering a diffusing particle and presenting a stochastic definition of Brownian motion in the presence of a permeable barrier. This definition relies on reflected Brownian motion and on the crossing events being Poisson processes subordinated by the local time of the underlying motion at the barrier. Within this paradigm we derive the exact expression for the distribution of the number of crossings, and find an experimentally measurable statistical definition of permeability. We employ Feynman-Kac theory to derive and solve a set of governing birth-death diffusion equations and extend them to when barrier permeability is asymmetric. As an application we study a system of infinite, identical and periodically placed asymmetric barriers for which we derive analytically effective transport parameters. This periodic arrangement induces an effective drift at long times whose magnitude depends on the difference in the permeability on either side of the barrier as well as on their absolute values. As the asymmetric permeabilities act akin to localised ``ratchet'' potentials that break spatial symmetry and detailed balance, the proposed arrangement of asymmetric barriers provides an example of a noise-induced drift without the need to time-modulate any external force or create temporal correlations on the motion of a diffusing particle.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- June 2024
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.2406.07142
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2406.07142
- Bibcode:
- 2024arXiv240607142K
- Keywords:
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- Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics;
- Mathematical Physics