We present exact results for the fluctuations in the number of particles crossing the origin up to time t in a collection of noninteracting run and tumble particles in one dimension. In contrast to passive systems, such active particles are endowed with two inherent degrees of freedom, positions and velocities, which can be used to construct density and magnetization fields. We introduce generalized disorder averages associated with both these fields and perform annealed and quenched averages over various initial conditions. We show that the variance σ^{2} of the current in annealed versus quenched magnetization situations exhibits a surprising difference at short times, σ^{2}∼t vs σ^{2}∼t^{2}, respectively, with a sqrt[t] behavior emerging at large times. Our analytical results demonstrate that in the strictly quenched scenario, where both the density and magnetization fields are initially frozen, the fluctuations in the current are strongly suppressed. Importantly, these anomalous fluctuations cannot be obtained solely by freezing the density field.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.108.L052601 | DOI Listing |
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