The complex chemical Langevin equation
David Schnoerr, Guido Sanguinetti, Ramon Grima

TL;DR
This paper introduces a complex extension of the chemical Langevin equation (CLE) that overcomes its breakdown issue at small molecule numbers, improving accuracy in simulating stochastic chemical systems.
Contribution
The authors propose a complex-valued CLE that eliminates breakdown problems and enhances the accuracy of stochastic chemical system simulations compared to existing correction methods.
Findings
Complex CLE predicts real-valued physical quantities.
It outperforms corrected real-valued CLE in accuracy.
Breakdown is eliminated in complex space.
Abstract
The chemical Langevin equation (CLE) is a popular simulation method to probe the stochastic dynamics of chemical systems. The CLE's main disadvantage is its break down in finite time due to the problem of evaluating square roots of negative quantities whenever the molecule numbers become sufficiently small. We show that this issue is not a numerical integration problem, rather in many systems it is intrinsic to all representations of the CLE. Various methods of correcting the CLE have been proposed which avoid its break down. We show that these methods introduce undesirable artefacts in the CLE's predictions. In particular, for unimolecular systems, these correction methods lead to CLE predictions for the mean concentrations and variance of fluctuations which disagree with those of the chemical master equation. We show that, by extending the domain of the CLE to complex space, break…
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