Observation-Time-Induced Crossover from Fluctuating Diffusivity
Masahiro Shirataki, Takuma Akimoto

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that fluctuating diffusivity causes an observation-time-dependent crossover in diffusion behavior, explaining temperature-dependent mobility changes in hydrated proteins.
Contribution
It reveals that observation-time-induced crossover is a universal non-equilibrium phenomenon arising from fluctuating diffusivity within a Langevin framework.
Findings
Effective diffusion coefficient changes with temperature and observation time.
Analytical and numerical analyses elucidate the crossover mechanism.
Identifies minimal conditions for the emergence of the crossover.
Abstract
A sharp change in apparent mobility at a characteristic temperature that depends on the observation time has been reported in experiments and simulations of hydrated proteins. Such behavior is often discussed in the context of the protein dynamical transition, yet its general physical origin remains unclear. Here we show that fluctuating diffusivity within a Langevin framework naturally gives rise to an observation-time-induced crossover in translational diffusion: the effective diffusion coefficient exhibits a temperature-dependent change whose crossover point systematically shifts with the observation time. Through analytical and numerical analyses, we elucidate the mechanism of this crossover and identify the minimal conditions required for its emergence. Our results establish observation-time-induced crossover as a generic non-equilibrium phenomenon in systems with slowly relaxing…
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