Angles of Random Polytopes
Abstract
We will consider some problems on calculating the average angles of random polytopes. Some of them are open.
We will consider some problems on calculating the average angles of random polytopes. Some of them are open.
Consider the asymmetric simple exclusion process with k particles on a linear lattice of N sites. I will present results on the asymptotic of the time needed for the system to reach its equilibrium distribution starting from the worst initial configuration (also called mixing time). Two main regimes appear according to the strength of the asymmetry (in terms of k and N), and in both regimes, the system displays a cutoff phenomenon: the distance to equilibrium falls abruptly from 1 to 0. This is a joint work with Hubert Lacoin (IMPA).
In a joint-work with Andrea Collevecchio and Vladas Sidoravicius, we study phase transitions in the recurrence/transience of a class of self-interacting random walks on trees, which includes the once-reinforced random walk. For this purpose, we define the branching-ruin number of a tree, which is a natural way to measure trees with polynomial growth and therefore provides a polynomial version of the branching number defined by Furstenberg (1970) and studied by R. Lyons (1990). We prove that the branching-ruin number of a tree is equal to the critical parameter for the recurrence/transience of the once-reinforced random walk on this tree. We will also mention two other results where the branching-ruin number arises as critical parameter: first, in the context of random walks on heavy-tailed random conductances on trees and, second, in the case of Volkov's M-digging random walk.
We consider Brownian motion with Kato class measure-valued drift. A small time large deviation principle and a Varadhan type asymptotics for the Brownian motion with singular drift are established. We also study the existence and uniqueness of the associated Dirichlet boundary value problems.
We first give a short introduction to analysis and stochastic processes on fractal state spaces and the typical difficulties involved.
We then discuss gradient operators and semilinear PDE. They are used to formulate the main result which establishes the hydrodynamic limit of the weakly asymmetric exclusion process on the Sierpinski gasket in the form of a law of large numbers for the particle density. We will explain some details and, if time permits, also sketch a corresponding large deviations principle for the symmetric case.
In this talk I present work in progress with Wolfgang König and Nicolas Perkowski on the parabolic Anderson model (PAM) with white noise potential in 2d. We show the behavior of the total mass as the time tends to infinity. By using partial Girsanov transform and singular heat kernel estimates we can obtain the mass-asymptotics by using the eigenvalue asymptotics that have been showed in another work in progress with Khalil Chouk.
We prove an a priori bound for solutions of the dynamic $\Phi^4_3$ equation.
This bound provides a control on solutions on a compact space-time set only in terms of the realisation of the noise on an enlargement of this set, and it does not depend on any choice of space-time boundary conditions.
We treat the large and small scale behaviour of solutions with completely different arguments.For small scales we use bounds akin to those presented in Hairer's theory of regularity structures. We stress immediately that our proof is fully self-contained, but we give a detailed explanation of how our arguments relate to Hairer's. For large scales we use a PDE argument based on the maximum principle. Both regimes are connected by a solution-dependent regularisation procedure.
The fact that our bounds do not depend on space-time boundary conditions makes them useful for the analysis of large scale properties of solutions. They can for example be used in a compactness argument to construct solutions on the full space and their invariant measures
Abstract: We use groupoids to describe a geometric framework which can host a generalisation of Hairer's regularity structures to manifolds. In this setup, Hairer's re-expansionmap (usually denoted \Gamma) is a (direct) connection on a gauge groupoid and can therefore be viewed as a groupoid counterpart of a (local) gauge field. This definitions enables us to make the link between re-expansion maps (direct connections), principal connections and path connections, to understand the flatness of the direct connection in terms of that of the manifold and, finally, to easily build a polynomial regularity structure which we compare to the one given by Driver, Diehl and Dahlquist. (Join work with Sara Azzali, Alessandra Frabetti and Sylvie Paycha).
Quantum Yang-Mills theory is an important part of the Standard model built by physicists to describe elementary particles and their interactions. One approach to the mathematical substance of this theory consists in constructing a probability measure on an infinite-dimensional space of connections on a principal bundle over space-time. However, in the physically realistic 4-dimensional situation, the construction of this measure is still an open mathematical problem. The subject of this talk will be the physically less realistic 2-dimensional situation, in which the construction of the measure is possible, and fairly well understood.
In probabilistic terms, the 2-dimensional Yang-Mills measure is the distribution of a stochastic process with values in a compact Lie group (for example the unitary group U(N)) indexed by the set of continuous closed curves with finite length on a compact surface (for example a disk, a sphere or a torus) on which one can measure areas. It can be seen as a Brownian motion (or a Brownian bridge) on the chosen compact Lie group indexed by closed curves, the role of time being played in a sense by area.
In this talk, I will describe the physical context in which the Yang-Mills measure is constructed, and describe it without assuming any prior familiarity with the subject. I will then present a set of results obtained in the last few years by Antoine Dahlqvist, Bruce Driver, Franck Gabriel, Brian Hall, Todd Kemp, James Norris and myself concerning the limit as N tends to infinity of the Yang-Mills measure constructed with the unitary group U(N).
We address the problem of pricing and hedging general exotic derivatives. We study this problem in the scenario when one has access to limited price data of other exotic derivatives. In this presentation I explore a nonparametric approach to pricing exotic payoffs using market prices of other exotic derivatives using signatures.