English

Interacting Random Walkers and Non-Equilibrium Fluctuations

Statistical Mechanics 2008-10-01 v1

Abstract

We introduce a model of interacting Random Walk, whose hopping amplitude depends on the number of walkers/particles on the link. The mesoscopic counterpart of such a microscopic dynamics is a diffusing system whose diffusivity depends on the particle density. A non-equilibrium stationary flux can be induced by suitable boundary conditions, and we show indeed that it is mesoscopically described by a Fourier equation with a density dependent diffusivity. A simple mean-field description predicts a critical diffusivity if the hopping amplitude vanishes for a certain walker density. Actually, we evidence that, even if the density equals this pseudo-critical value, the system does not present any criticality but only a dynamical slowing down. This property is confirmed by the fact that, in spite of interaction, the particle distribution at equilibrium is simply described in terms of a product of Poissonians. For mesoscopic systems with a stationary flux, a very effect of interaction among particles consists in the amplification of fluctuations, which is especially relevant close to the pseudo-critical density. This agrees with analogous results obtained for Ising models, clarifying that larger fluctuations are induced by the dynamical slowing down and not by a genuine criticality. The consistency of this amplification effect with altered coloured noise in time series is also proved.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.5244,
  title  = {Interacting Random Walkers and Non-Equilibrium Fluctuations},
  author = {E. Agliari and M. Casartelli and A. Vezzani},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.5244},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

8 pages, 7 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:25:46.457Z