Design of conditions for emergence of self-replicators
Sumantra Sarkar, Jeremy L. England

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework to identify physical conditions that favor the emergence of self-replicators from particle mixtures, providing criteria to guide experimental design and estimate growth timescales.
Contribution
It introduces a generic model analyzing physical interactions to determine key features promoting self-replication emergence.
Findings
Spontaneous self-replication depends on reaction time dispersion and energy distribution.
Quantitative criteria for designing self-replicating systems are provided.
Estimated timescales for exponential growth are derived.
Abstract
A self-replicator is usually understood to be an object of definite form that promotes the conversion of materials in its environment into a nearly identical copy of itself. The challenge of engineering novel, micro- or nano-scale self-replicators has attracted keen interest in recent years, both because exponential amplification is an attractive method for generating high yields of specific products, and also because self-reproducing entities have the potential to be optimized or adapted through rounds of iterative selection. Substantial steps forward have been achieved both in the engineering of particular self-replicating molecules, and also in characterizing the physical basis for possible mechanisms of self-replication. At present, however, there is need for a theoretical treatment of what physical conditions are most conducive to the emergence of novel self-replicating structures…
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