Transience of percolation clusters on wedges.
Angel, Omer, Benjamini, Itai, Berger, Noam, Peres, Yuval (2006)
Electronic Journal of Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Angel, Omer, Benjamini, Itai, Berger, Noam, Peres, Yuval (2006)
Electronic Journal of Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Sellke, Thomas (2006)
Electronic Journal of Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Belhaouari, S., Mountford, T., Sun, Rongfeng, Valle, G. (2006)
Electronic Journal of Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Faggionato, Alessandra (2010)
Electronic Journal of Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Kager, Wouter, Levine, Lionel (2010)
The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics [electronic only]
Similarity:
Zerner, Martin P.W. (2006)
Electronic Communications in Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Deijfen, Maria, Häggström, Olle (2006)
Electronic Journal of Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Caputo, Pietro, Faggionato, Alessandra, Gaudilliere, Alexandre (2009)
Electronic Journal of Probability [electronic only]
Similarity:
Wolfgang König (2010)
Actes des rencontres du CIRM
Similarity:
The asymptotics of the probability that the self-intersection local time of a random walk on exceeds its expectation by a large amount is a fascinating subject because of its relation to some models from Statistical Mechanics, to large-deviation theory and variational analysis and because of the variety of the effects that can be observed. However, the proof of the upper bound is notoriously difficult and requires various sophisticated techniques. We survey some heuristics and some...
Marc Wouts (2010)
Actes des rencontres du CIRM
Similarity:
We study a quenched charged-polymer model, introduced by Garel and Orland in 1988, that reproduces the folding/unfolding transition of biopolymers. We prove that, below the critical inverse temperature, the polymer is delocalized in the sense that: (1) The rescaled trajectory of the polymer converges to the Brownian path; and (2) The partition function remains bounded. At the critical inverse temperature, we show that the maximum time spent at points jumps discontinuously...