What’s
true for jealous lovers and frustrated parents also applies to nanoscale cogs
and wheels and environmental regulations: Cutting some slack sometimes gives
better results than being too strict.
Giovanni
Volpe, a physicist at the Institute for Photonic Sciences in Barcelona, and his colleagues took a fresh
look at the mathematics of constraints — specifically, of “noisy” constraints.
That’s when both the constrained object and the stuff that’s constraining it
experience small, random fluctuations, or noise.
An
example, Volpe explains, is the atomic force microscope, a tool that can sense
and impart tiny forces on objects as small as single atoms, but has limited
accuracy because of thermal vibrations. Other examples include molecular
machines that transport stuff within living cells while attached to microscopic
strings — again a situation where thermal shaking is relentless.
Volpe’s
team calculated what happens when constraints become tighter. Initially, an object
becomes more stable, as expected. But only to an extent. “Beyond a certain
threshold…things start to get worse,” Volpe says.
Staying
right at that threshold provides just the right amount of slack to get the best
possible results. It’s similar to how a child will remain calm when allowed to
move around but will get more fidgety when asked to stay still. And it’s a happy
medium that evolution may have found eons of years ago for cellular machines,
Volpe says. (But one that possessive lovers still struggle with.)
To
corroborate their theory, the researchers tried applying their reverse
psychology to microscopic beads suspended in water. A tool called an optical
tweezer can keep a bead more or less in place using laser pulses. But the bead
will keep jostling a bit, due to random collisions with the water molecules
that surround it.
To
some extent, the bead can be stabilized, says Volpe’s collaborator Sandro
Perrone. “As you increase the power of the laser, the particle becomes more and
more still.” But when the researchers kept cranking up the power of their
optical tweezer, they obtained the opposite result. Past a certain threshold, a
200-nanometer bead became more restless, not less, the researchers describe in
an upcoming Physical Review E.
The
result could have applications in the design of nanoscale machines, Volpe says.
For example, it shows that making an atomic force microscope stiffer won’t
necessarily help.
Yaneer
Bar-Yam of the New England Complex Systems Institute in Cambridge, Mass.,
says the newly discovered principle could find applications to ecosystems and
to social and economic sciences — all of which involve random, unpredictable
fluctuations — assuming that those phenomena obey the same mathematical rules.
A possible case in point, Bar-Yam says, is the
chronic food shortages in the state-run economy of the old Soviet Union. “The
effectiveness of food delivery is much better in a free market,” he says, though
a complete lack of regulation can lead to chaos.
Found in: Mathematics and Physics