Impulse Response Function for Brownian Motion
Nicos Makris

TL;DR
This paper explores the physical meaning of the first derivative of the mean-square displacement in Brownian motion, linking it to the impulse response function of a rheological network with an inerter, providing new insights into viscoelastic particle dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a rheological analogue involving an inerter to interpret the derivative of mean-square displacement in Brownian motion, connecting it to the impulse response function of the system.
Findings
The derivative of mean-square displacement equals a scaled impulse response function.
Derived explicit expressions for Brownian motion in Maxwell-viscoelastic fluids.
Showed the impulse response function remains finite at long times in fluid-like soft matter.
Abstract
Motivated from the central role of the mean-square displacement and its second time-derivative -- that is the velocity autocorrelation function in the description of Brownian motion, we revisit the physical meaning of the first time-derivative of the mean-square displacement of Brownian particles. By employing a rheological analogue for Brownian motion, we show that the time-derivative of the mean-square displacement of Brownian microspheres with mass and radius immersed in any linear, isotropic viscoelastic material is identical to , where is the impulse response function of a rheological network that is a parallel connection of the…
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