scientists have shown the energy conditions, under which a weak signal supplied to a physical system emerges as a stronger signal at the output thanks to the presence of 1 noise (a process known as stochastic随机的 2), in a paper that has just been published in the the european physical journal b (epj b). stochastic resonance goes against the intuitive idea that where noise is present, the signal tends to fade. it occurs in systems where the response is not proportional to the 3 4 signal, known as nonlinear(非线性的) systems.
the authors, shubhashis rana, sourabh lahiri and arun m. jayannavar from the institute of physics, in bhubaneswar, india, used a model consisting of a symmetric(对称的) double-well energy potential in which a particle moves 5. they studied the effect of the steepness of the walls of the confining energy potential by observing the movement of the particle, which they subjected to an external sinusoidal(正弦曲线的) signal that alternately lowers either of the wells.
the authors selected a quantifier -- the average work done on the system by the signal -- to determine the conditions under which the particle moving from one well to the opposite side well and back at every cycle of the signal reaches stochastic resonance. they found that it only occurs when the potential is "hard," meaning that it has 6 steep walls, but breaks down otherwise. previous work used different quantifiers and found similar results, confirming their findings using numerical simulations.
this study contributes to improving scientists' understanding of stochastic resonance. it could, ultimately, contribute to gaining deeper insights into physics-related 7 such as the processing of unclear images to increase their resolution* and biological systems, including mechanoreceptor cells in crayfish(小龙虾) and the functioning of 8 neurons in humans.