Abstract

The flexibility and the extension along the direction of the force are shown to be related to the bubble number fluctuation and the average number of bubbles, respectively, when the strands of the DNA are subjected to a force along the same direction, here called a stretching force. The force-temperature phase diagram shows the existence of a tricritical point, where the first-order force-induced zipping transition becomes continuous. On the other hand, when the forces are being applied in opposite directions, here called an unzipping force, the transition remains first order, with the possibility of vanishing of the low-temperature reentrant phase for a semiflexible DNA. Moreover, we found that the bulk elasticity changes only if an external force penetrates the bound phase and affects the bubble states.

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