Cooperative surmounting of bottlenecks
D. Hennig, C. Mulhern, L. Schimansky-Geier, G.P. Tsironis, and P., H\"anggi

TL;DR
This paper reviews phenomena related to cooperative escape and transport in systems of interacting units overcoming potential barriers, highlighting recent developments in deterministic and driven dynamics that lead to enhanced or directed escape.
Contribution
It introduces new insights into how coupled nonlinear units can spontaneously escape metastable states and achieve directed transport through collective mechanisms and phase space channels.
Findings
Self-organized escape via local energy modes in chains of units.
Enhanced noise-free escape rates compared to stochastic cases.
Directed long-range transport through ballistic channels in phase space.
Abstract
The physics of activated escape of objects out of a metastable state plays a key role in diverse scientific areas involving chemical kinetics, diffusion and dislocation motion in solids, nucleation, electrical transport, motion of flux lines superconductors, charge density waves, and transport processes of macromolecules, to name but a few. The underlying activated processes present the multidimensional extension of the Kramers problem of a single Brownian particle. In comparison to the latter case, however, the dynamics ensuing from the interactions of many coupled units can lead to intriguing novel phenomena that are not present when only a single degree of freedom is involved. In this review we report on a variety of such phenomena that are exhibited by systems consisting of chains of interacting units in the presence of potential barriers. In the first part we consider recent…
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