A tale of three approaches: dynamical phase transitions for weakly bound Brownian particles
Lucianno Defaveri, Eli Barkai, David A. Kessler

TL;DR
This paper explores the relaxation dynamics of weakly bound Brownian particles in attractive potentials, revealing a stretched exponential decay and a dynamical phase transition through three complementary analytical approaches.
Contribution
It introduces a unified analysis of anomalous relaxation and phase transitions in weakly bound Brownian systems using rate functions, eigenfunction methods, and path-integral formalism.
Findings
Relaxation follows a stretched exponential decay with exponent .
A dynamical phase transition is identified in the system.
Multiple analytical methods consistently describe the same anomalous behavior.
Abstract
We investigate a system of Brownian particles weakly bound by attractive parity-symmetric potentials that grow at large distances as , with . The probability density function at long times reaches the Boltzmann-Gibbs equilibrium state, with all moments finite. However, the system's relaxation is not exponential, as is usual for a confining system with a well-defined equilibrium, but instead follows a stretched exponential with exponent . This problem is studied from three perspectives. First, we propose a straightforward and general scaling rate-function solution for . This rate-function, which is an important tool from large deviation theory, also displays anomalous time scaling and a dynamical phase transition. Second, through the eigenfunctions of the Fokker-Planck operator,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiffusion and Search Dynamics · Stochastic processes and statistical mechanics · Theoretical and Computational Physics
