Nucleation dynamics in 2d cylindrical Ising models and chemotaxis
Carla Bosia, Michele Caselle, Davide Cor\'a

TL;DR
This study investigates how changing the geometry of a 2D cylindrical Ising model affects nucleation times and explores implications for eukaryotic chemotaxis, showing that geometry modifications can significantly accelerate nucleation processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that geometry variation in a 2D Ising model can speed up nucleation times, providing insights into cell chemotaxis mechanisms.
Findings
Squeezing the geometry speeds up nucleation times.
Geometry variation reduces nucleation times even with small energy gaps.
Implications for cell protrusions enhancing chemotaxis sensitivity.
Abstract
The aim of our work is to study the effect of geometry variation on nucleation times and to address its role in the context of eukaryotic chemotaxis (i.e. the process which allows cells to identify and follow a gradient of chemical attractant). As a first step in this direction we study the nucleation dynamics of the 2d Ising model defined on a cylindrical lattice whose radius changes as a function of time. Geometry variation is obtained by changing the relative value of the couplings between spins in the compactified (vertical) direction with respect to the horizontal one. This allows us to keep the lattice size unchanged and study in a single simulation the values of the compactification radius which change in time. We show, both with theoretical arguments and numerical simulations that squeezing the geometry allows the system to speed up nucleation times even in presence of a very…
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