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The time which a diffusing particle spends in a certain region of space is known as the occupation time, or the residence time. Recently the joint occupation time statistics of an ensemble of non-interacting particles was addressed using the single-particle statistics. Here we employ the Macroscopic Fluctuation Theory (MFT) to study the occupation time statistics of many emph{interacting} particles. We find that interactions can significantly change the statistics and, in some models, even cause a singularity of the large-deviation function describing these statistics. This singularity can be interpreted as a dynamical phase transition. We also point out to a close relation between the MFT description of the occupation-time statistics of non-interacting particles and the level 2 large deviation formalism which describes the occupation-time statistics of a single particle.
The narrow escape problem deals with the calculation of the mean escape time (MET) of a Brownian particle from a bounded domain through a small hole on the domains boundary. Here we develop a formalism that allows us to evaluate the emph{non-escape p
At finite concentrations of reacting molecules, kinetics of diffusion-controlled reactions is affected by intra-reactant interactions. As a result, multi-particle reaction statistics cannot be deduced from single-particle results. Here we briefly rev
Suppose that a $d$-dimensional domain is filled with a gas of (in general, interacting) diffusive particles with density $n_0$. A particle is absorbed whenever it reaches the domain boundary. Employing macroscopic fluctuation theory, we evaluate the
We study fluctuations of particle absorption by a three-dimensional domain with multiple absorbing patches. The domain is in contact with a gas of interacting diffusing particles. This problem is motivated by living cell sensing via multiple receptor
We investigate how confinement may drastically change both the probability density of the first-encounter time and the related survival probability in the case of two diffusing particles. To obtain analytical insights into this problem, we focus on t