Random transitions described by the stochastic Smoluchowski-Poisson system and by the stochastic Keller-Segel model
P.H. Chavanis, L. Delfini

TL;DR
This paper investigates stochastic transitions between metastable states in a one-dimensional self-gravitating Brownian gas and a related Keller-Segel model, highlighting how fluctuations influence state stability and transition times.
Contribution
It introduces a stochastic framework for analyzing metastable state transitions in long-range interacting systems, extending classical models to include finite-size fluctuations.
Findings
Metastable state lifetime scales as e^N, becoming very long for large N.
Transitions follow Kramers' phenomenology with Poissonian residence times.
Fluctuations significantly reduce metastable lifetime near critical points.
Abstract
We study random transitions between two metastable states that appear below a critical temperature in a one dimensional self-gravitating Brownian gas with a modified Poisson equation experiencing a second order phase transition from a homogeneous phase to an inhomogeneous phase. We numerically solve the -body Langevin equations and the stochastic Smoluchowski-Poisson system which takes fluctuations (finite effects) into account. The system switches back and forth between the two metastable states (bistability) and the particles accumulate successively at the center or at the boundary of the domain. We show that these random transitions exhibit the phenomenology of the ordinary Kramers problem for a Brownian particle in a double-well potential. The distribution of the residence time is Poissonian and the average lifetime of a metastable state is given by the Arrhenius law, i.e. it…
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