How much time does it take for a fluctuating system, such as a polymer chain, to reach a target configuration that is rarely visited - typically because of a high energy cost? This question generally amounts to the determination of the first-passage time statistics to a target zone in phase space with lower occupation probability. Here, we present an analytical method to determine the mean first-passage time of a generic non-Markovian random walker to a rarely visited threshold, which goes beyond existing weak-noise theories. We apply our method to polymer systems, to determine (i) the first time for a flexible polymer to reach a large extension, and (ii) the first closure time of a stiff inextensible wormlike chain. Our results are in excellent agreement with numerical simulations and provide explicit asymptotic laws for the mean first-passage times to rarely visited configurations.
CITATION STYLE
Levernier, N., Bénichou, O., Voituriez, R., & Guérin, T. (2020). Kinetics of rare events for non-Markovian stationary processes and application to polymer dynamics. Physical Review Research, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.012057
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.