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Reaction kinetics in the few-encounter limit (1901.09815v2)

Published 28 Jan 2019 in cond-mat.stat-mech, math-ph, and math.MP

Abstract: The classical theory of chemical reactions can be understood in terms of diffusive barrier crossing, where the rate of a reaction is determined by the inverse of the mean first passage time (FPT) to cross a free energy barrier. Whenever a few reaction events suffice to trigger a response or the energy barriers are not high, the mean first passage time alone does not suffice to characterize the kinetics, i.e., the kinetics do not occur on a single time-scale. Instead, the full statistics of the FPT are required. We present a spectral representation of the FPT statistics that allows us to understand and accurately determine FPT distributions over several orders of magnitudes in time. A canonical narrowing of the first passage density is shown to emerge whenever several molecules are searching for the same target, which was termed the 'few-encounter limit'. The few-encounter limit is essential in all situations, in which already the first encounter triggers a response, such as misfolding-triggered aggregation of proteins or protein transcription regulation.

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