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We study the problem of random search in finite networks with a tree topology, where it is expected that the distribution of the first-passage time F(t) decays exponentially. We show that the slope of the exponential tail is independent of the initial conditions of entering the tree in general, and scales exponentially or as a power law with the extent of the tree L, depending on the tendency p to jump toward the target node. It is unfeasible to uniquely determine L and p from measuring the tail slope or the mean first-passage time (MFPT) of an ordinary diffusion along the tree. To unravel the structure, we consider lazy random walkers that take steps with probability m when jumping on the nodes and return with probability q from the leaves. By deriving an exact analytical expression for the MFPT of the intermittent random walk, we verify that the structural information of the tree can be uniquely extracted by measuring the MFPT for two randomly chosen types of tracer particles with distinct experimental parameters m and q. We also address the applicability of our approach in the presence of disorder in the structure of the tree or statistical uncertainty in the experimental parameters.
We present a general framework, applicable to a broad class of random walks on complex networks, which provides a rigorous lower bound for the mean first-passage time of a random walker to a target site averaged over its starting position, the so-cal
We investigate the voltage-driven transport of hybridized DNA through membrane channels. As membrane channels are typically too narrow to accommodate hybridized DNA, the dehybridization of the DNA is the critical rate limiting step in the transport p
We consider the first-passage problem for $N$ identical independent particles that are initially released uniformly in a finite domain $Omega$ and then diffuse toward a reactive area $Gamma$, which can be part of the outer boundary of $Omega$ or a re
An efficient searcher needs to balance properly the tradeoff between the exploration of new spatial areas and the exploitation of nearby resources, an idea which is at the core of scale-free Levy search strategies. Here we study multi-scale random wa
We consider the diffusion scaling limit of the vicious walkers and derive the time-dependent spatial-distribution function of walkers. The dependence on initial configurations of walkers is generally described by using the symmetric polynomials calle