Complex systems are known to display anomalous diffusion, whose signature is a space/time scaling x ∼ t with δ 6= 1/2 in the Probability Density Function (PDF). Anomalous diffusion can… Click to show full abstract
Complex systems are known to display anomalous diffusion, whose signature is a space/time scaling x ∼ t with δ 6= 1/2 in the Probability Density Function (PDF). Anomalous diffusion can emerge jointly with both Gaussian, e.g., fractional Brownian motion, and power-law decaying distributions, e.g., Lévy Flights (LFs) or Lévy Walks (LWs). LFs get anomalous scaling, but also infinite position variance and, being jumps of any size allowed even at short times, also infinite energy and discontinuous velocity. LWs are based on random trapping events, resemble a Lévy-type power-law distribution that is truncated in the large displacement range and have finite moments, finite energy and discontinuous velocity. However, both LFs and LWs cannot describe friction-diffusion processes and do not take into account the role of strong heterogeneity in many complex systems, such as biological transport in the crowded cell environment. We propose and discuss a model describing a Heterogeneous Ensemble of Brownian Particles (HEBP) based on a linear Langevin equation. We show that, for proper distributions of relaxation time and velocity diffusivity, the HEBP displays features similar to LWs, in particular power-law decaying PDF, longrange correlations and anomalous diffusion, at the same time keeping finite position moments and finite energy. The main differences between the HEBP model and two LWs are investigated, finding that, even if the PDFs are similar, they differ in three main aspects: (i) LWs are biscaling, while HEBP is monoscaling; (ii) a transition from anomalous (δ 6= 1/2) to normal (δ = 1/2) diffusion in the long-time regime; (iii) the power-law index of the position PDF and the space/time diffusion scaling are independent in the HEBP, while they both depend on the scaling of the inter-event time PDF in LWs. The HEBP model is derived from a friction-diffusion process, it has finite energy and it satisfies the fluctuation-dissipation theorem. PACS numbers: 02.50.Ey, 05.40.Fb, 05.40.Jc, 87.10.Mm, 87.15.Vv
               
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