File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

  • Find it @ UNIST can give you direct access to the published full text of this article. (UNISTARs only)
Related Researcher

김철민

Ghim, Cheol-Min
Physical Biology Biological Physics Lab.
Read More

Views & Downloads

Detailed Information

Cited time in webofscience Cited time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

Full metadata record

DC Field Value Language
dc.citation.conferencePlace KO -
dc.citation.title 2025 KPS Fall Meeting -
dc.contributor.author Bahng, Sehoon -
dc.contributor.author Ghim, Cheol-Min -
dc.contributor.author Kim, Minjun -
dc.contributor.author Jeong, Joonwoo -
dc.date.accessioned 2026-01-09T18:56:22Z -
dc.date.available 2026-01-09T18:56:22Z -
dc.date.created 2026-01-09 -
dc.date.issued 2025-10-21 -
dc.description.abstract Queuing models, though originating in operations research, have become powerful metaphors for understanding stochastic processes in physics and biology. In particular, the dynamics of bacterial twitching on surfaces reveal residence times that span a surprisingly wide range, suggesting underlying mechanisms of delay and congestion. To capture this, we analyze the canonical $M/M/1/K$ queue—a single-server system with Poisson arrivals, exponential service times, and finite buffer size $K$. While the infinite-capacity version of this model is known to generate a scale-free distribution of waiting times when arrival and service rates balance, the consequences of finite system size have remained unclear. Our analysis shows that truncating the buffer leads to a sharp modification of the statistics: the power-law tail is preserved but terminated by an exponential cutoff, whose characteristic scale grows as $\sim K^{1.9}$. This nontrivial finite-size scaling highlights how microscopic constraints reshape macroscopic distributions, offering a general framework for interpreting residence-time spectra in stochastic transport—from bacterial surface motility to broader classes of nonequilibrium systems. -
dc.identifier.bibliographicCitation 2025 KPS Fall Meeting -
dc.identifier.uri https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/90209 -
dc.publisher Korean Physical Society -
dc.title Nontrivial Finite-Size Effects in Stochastic Residence Times: Lessons from Queues and Bacteria -
dc.type Conference Paper -
dc.date.conferenceDate 2025-10-21 -

qrcode

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.