Single-molecule systems contribute to determine fundamental concepts of statistical physics

The experiments have been carried out at the Small Biosystems Lab, located at the Faculty of Physics of the UB.
The experiments have been carried out at the Small Biosystems Lab, located at the Faculty of Physics of the UB.
Research
(01/09/2015)

A study, led by researchers at the University of Barcelona (UB) and published in the journal Nature Physics, presents the first direct experimental demonstration of the effective temperature by measuring correlations and responses in single molecules in non-equilibrium steady states generated under external random forces.

The experiments have been carried out at the Small Biosystems Lab, located at the Faculty of Physics of the UB.
The experiments have been carried out at the Small Biosystems Lab, located at the Faculty of Physics of the UB.
Research
01/09/2015

A study, led by researchers at the University of Barcelona (UB) and published in the journal Nature Physics, presents the first direct experimental demonstration of the effective temperature by measuring correlations and responses in single molecules in non-equilibrium steady states generated under external random forces.

Results prove the existence of an effective temperature, a parameter for non-equilibrium systems, which quantifies violations of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem (FDT), a powerful tool of statistical physics that is applied in equilibrium conditions. It has been observed that a modified form of the FDT (often called the quasi-FDT) can be also applied to some non-equilibrium systems.

In the study, UB researchers, together with a research team from the University of Sttutgart (Germany), have determined the effective temperature of single molecules, particularly DNA hairpins. The study shows that small systems are fundamental concepts to study statistical physics, condensed-matter physics and biophysics.

The study combines experiments carried out at the Small Biosystems Lab —located at the Faculty of Physics of the UB and led by Félix Ritort, professor in the Department of Fundamental Physics—, analytical theory and simulations for systems with different levels of complexity. Together with Ritort, Joan Camuñas and Marco Ribezzi, researchers in the Department of Fundamental Physics, also participated in the study.

 

Article reference:

Dieterich, E.; Camuñas-Soler, J.; Ribezzi-Crivellari, M.; Seifert U.; Ritort, F. "Single-molecule measurement of the effective temperature in non-equilibrium steady states". Nature Physics, 24 July 2015. Doi: 10.1038/nphys3435.