Résumé
A common scenario in a variety of biological systems is that multiple particles are searching in parallel for an immobile target located in a bounded domain, and the fastest among them that arrives to the target first triggers a given desirable or detrimental process. The statistics of such extreme events - the fastest first-passage to the target - is well-understood by now through a series of theoretical analyses, but exclusively under the assumption that all N particles start simultaneously, i.e., all are introduced into the domain instantly, by δ-function-like pulses. However, in many practically important situations this is not the case: to start their search, the particles often have to enter first into a bounded domain, e.g., a cell or its nucleus, penetrating through gated channels or nuclear pores. This entrance process has a random duration so that the particles appear in the domain sequentially and with a time delay. Here we focus on the effect of such an extended-in-time injection of multiple particles on the fastest first-passage time (fFPT) and its statistics. We derive the full probability density function HN(t) of the fFPT with an arbitrary time-dependent injection intensity of N particles. Under rather general assumptions on the survival probability of a single particle and on the injection intensity, we derive the large-N asymptotic formula for the mean fFPT, which is quite different from that obtained for the instantaneous δ-pulse injection. The extended injection is also shown to considerably slow down the convergence of HN(t) to its large-N limit - the Gumbel distribution - so that the latter may be inapplicable in the most relevant settings with few tens to few thousands of particles.
| langue originale | Anglais |
|---|---|
| Numéro d'article | 023239 |
| journal | Physical Review Research |
| Volume | 7 |
| Numéro de publication | 2 |
| Les DOIs | |
| état | Publié - 1 avr. 2025 |
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