Closed-form solutions to the dynamics of confined biased lattice random walks in arbitrary dimensions

Seeralan Sarvaharman and Luca Giuggioli
Phys. Rev. E 102, 062124 – Published 10 December 2020

Abstract

Biased lattice random walks (BLRW) are used to model random motion with drift in a variety of empirical situations in engineering and natural systems such as phototaxis, chemotaxis, or gravitaxis. When motion is also affected by the presence of external borders resulting from natural barriers or experimental apparatuses, modelling biased random movement in confinement becomes necessary. To study these scenarios, confined BLRW models have been employed but so far only through computational techniques due to the lack of an analytic framework. Here, we lay the groundwork for such an analytical approach by deriving the Green's functions, or propagators, for the confined BLRW in arbitrary dimensions and arbitrary boundary conditions. By using these propagators we construct explicitly the time-dependent first-passage probability in one dimension for reflecting and periodic domains, while in higher dimensions we are able to find its generating function. The latter is used to find the mean first-passage passage time for a d-dimensional box, d-dimensional torus or a combination of both. We show the appearance of surprising characteristics such as the presence of saddles in the spatiotemporal dynamics of the propagator with reflecting boundaries, bimodal features in the first-passage probability in periodic domains and the minimization of the mean first-return time for a bias of intermediate strength in rectangular domains. Furthermore, we quantify how in a multitarget environment with the presence of a bias shorter mean first-passage times can be achieved by placing fewer targets close to boundaries in contrast to many targets away from them.

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  • Received 31 August 2020
  • Accepted 16 November 2020

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.062124

©2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

  1. Research Areas
Statistical Physics & Thermodynamics

Authors & Affiliations

Seeralan Sarvaharman1,* and Luca Giuggioli1,2,†

  • 1Department of Engineering Mathematics, University of Bristol, BS8 1UB, United Kingdom
  • 2Bristol Centre for Complexity Sciences, University of Bristol, BS8 1UB, United Kingdom

  • *s.sarvaharman@bristol.ac.uk
  • Luca.Giuggioli@bristol.ac.uk

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Vol. 102, Iss. 6 — December 2020

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