Date
Mon, 09 Feb 2009
15:45
Location
Oxford-Man Institute
Speaker
Dr Nikolaos Zygouras
Organisation
Warwick

Random polymers are used to model various physical ( Ising inter- faces, wetting, etc.) and biological ( DNA denaturation, etc.) phenomena They are modeled as a one dimensional random walk (Xn), with excursion length distribution

P(E1 = n) = (n)=nc, c > 1, and (n) a slowly varying function. The polymer gets a random reward, whenever it visits or crosses an interface. The random rewards are realised as a sequence of i.i.d. variables (Vn). Depending on the relation be- tween the mean value of the disorder Vn and the temperature, the polymer might prefer to stick on the interface (pinning) or undergo a long excursion away from it (depinning).

In this talk we will review some aspects of random polymer models. We will also discuss in more detail the pinning-depinning transition of the 'Pinning' model and also its relation to other directed polymer models

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