variational perturbation
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2021 ◽  
pp. 108128652110058
Author(s):  
Kosar Mozaffari ◽  
Fatemeh Ahmadpoor ◽  
Pradeep Sharma

Biological membranes undergo noticeable thermal fluctuations at physiological temperatures. When two membranes approach each other, they hinder the out-of-plane fluctuations of the other. This hindrance leads to an entropic repulsive force between membranes which, in an interplay with attractive and repulsive forces owing to other sources, affects a range of biological functions: cell adhesion, membrane fusion, self-assembly, binding–unbinding transition among others. In this work, we take cognizance of the fact that biological membranes are not purely mechanical entities and, owing to the phenomenon of flexoelectricity, exhibit a coupling between deformation and electric polarization. The ensuing coupled mechanics–electrostatics–statistical mechanics problem is analytically intractable. We use a variational perturbation method to analyze, in closed form, the contribution of flexoelectricity to the entropic force between two fluctuating membranes and discuss its possible physical implications. We find that flexoelectricity leads to a correction that switches from an enhanced attraction at close membrane separations and an enhanced repulsion when the membranes are further apart.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (05) ◽  
pp. 7203-7210
Author(s):  
Dominik Linzner ◽  
Heinz Koeppl

Coordinating multiple interacting agents to achieve a common goal is a difficult task with huge applicability. This problem remains hard to solve, even when limiting interactions to be mediated via a static interaction-graph. We present a novel approximate solution method for multi-agent Markov decision problems on graphs, based on variational perturbation theory. We adopt the strategy of planning via inference, which has been explored in various prior works. We employ a non-trivial extension of a novel high-order variational method that allows for approximate inference in large networks and has been shown to surpass the accuracy of existing variational methods. To compare our method to two state-of-the-art methods for multi-agent planning on graphs, we apply the method different standard GMDP problems. We show that in cases, where the goal is encoded as a non-local cost function, our method performs well, while state-of-the-art methods approach the performance of random guess. In a final experiment, we demonstrate that our method brings significant improvement for synchronization tasks.


Soft Matter ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (23) ◽  
pp. 4721-4734 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo Lue

The statistical mechanics of classical fluids can be approached from the particle perspective, where the focus is on the positions of the particles, or from the field perspective, where the focus is on the form of the interaction fields generated by the particles. These two perspectives can be combined through the variational perturbation method.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 853-894 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kin-Yiu Wong

AbstractFeynman’s path integral reformulates the quantum Schrödinger differential equation to be an integral equation. It has been being widely used to compute internuclear quantum-statistical effects on many-body molecular systems. In this Review, the molecular Schrödinger equation will first be introduced, together with the Born-Oppenheimer approximation that decouples electronic and internuclear motions. Some effective semiclassical potentials, e.g., centroid potential, which are all formulated in terms of Feynman’s path integral, will be discussed and compared. These semiclassical potentials can be used to directly calculate the quantum canonical partition function without individual Schrödinger’s energy eigenvalues. As a result, path integrations are conventionally performed with Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics sampling techniques. To complement these techniques, we will examine how Kleinert’s variational perturbation (KP) theory can provide a complete theoretical foundation for developing non-sampling/non-stochastic methods to systematically calculate centroid potential. To enable the powerful KP theory to be practical for many-body molecular systems, we have proposed a new path-integral method: automated integration-free path-integral (AIF-PI) method. Due to the integration-free and computationally inexpensive characteristics of our AIF-PI method, we have used it to perform ab initio path-integral calculations of kinetic isotope effects on proton-transfer and RNA-related phosphoryl-transfer chemical reactions. The computational procedure of using our AIF-PI method, along with the features of our new centroid path-integral theory at the minimum of the absolute-zero energy (AMAZE), are also highlighted in this review.


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