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arxiv: 1710.02098 · v3 · pith:7LQB4UQKnew · submitted 2017-09-27 · 🧬 q-bio.MN · cond-mat.stat-mech· physics.bio-ph· q-bio.CB

Robustness of clocks to input noise

classification 🧬 q-bio.MN cond-mat.stat-mechphysics.bio-phq-bio.CB
keywords oscillatortimelimit-cyclecyanobacteriadrivinghourglassinputinput-noise
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To estimate the time, many organisms, ranging from cyanobacteria to animals, employ a circadian clock which is based on a limit-cycle oscillator that can tick autonomously with a nearly 24h period. Yet, a limit-cycle oscillator is not essential for knowing the time, as exemplified by bacteria that possess an 'hourglass': a system that when forced by an oscillatory light input exhibits robust oscillations from which the organism can infer the time, but that in the absence of driving relaxes to a stable fixed point. Here, using models of the Kai system of cyanobacteria, we compare a limit- cycle oscillator with two hourglass models, one that without driving relaxes exponentially and one that does so in an oscillatory fashion. In the limit of low input-noise, all three systems are equally informative on time, yet in the regime of high input-noise the limit-cycle oscillator is far superior. The same behavior is found in the Stuart-Landau model, indicating that our result is universal.

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