Far from equilibrium percolation, stochastic and shape resonances in the physics of life

Int J Mol Sci. 2011;12(10):6810-33. doi: 10.3390/ijms12106810. Epub 2011 Oct 14.

Abstract

Key physical concepts, relevant for the cross-fertilization between condensed matter physics and the physics of life seen as a collective phenomenon in a system out-of-equilibrium, are discussed. The onset of life can be driven by: (a) the critical fluctuations at the protonic percolation threshold in membrane transport; (b) the stochastic resonance in biological systems, a mechanism that can exploit external and self-generated noise in order to gain efficiency in signal processing; and (c) the shape resonance (or Fano resonance or Feshbach resonance) in the association and dissociation processes of bio-molecules (a quantum mechanism that could play a key role to establish a macroscopic quantum coherence in the cell).

Keywords: Fano resonance; Feshbach resonance; complexity; criticality; emergence of life; non-equilibrium thermodynamics; percolation; quantum entanglement; shape resonance; stochastic resonance.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Physical Phenomena*
  • Stochastic Processes*
  • Thermodynamics