Tue, 12 Feb 2008
13:30
L3

On properties of random dissections of a convex polygon

Angelika Steger
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract

In the past decades the $G_{n,p}$ model of random graphs has led to numerous beautiful and deep theorems. A key feature that is used in basically all proofs is that edges in $G_{n,p}$ appear independently.

The independence of the edges allows, for example, to obtain extremely tight bounds on the number of edges of $G_{n,p}$ and its degree sequence by straightforward applications of Chernoff bounds. This situation changes dramatically if one considers graph classes with structural side constraints. In this talk we show how recent progress in the construction of so-called Boltzmann samplers by Duchon, Flajolet, Louchard, and Schaeffer can be used to reduce the study of degree sequences and subgraph counts to properties of sequences of independent and identically distributed random variables -- to which we can then again apply Chernoff bounds to obtain extremely tight results. As proof of concept we study properties of random graphs that are drawn uniformly at random from the class consisting of the dissections of large convex polygons. We obtain very sharp concentration results for the number of vertices of any given degree, and for the number of induced copies of a given fixed graph.

Mon, 30 Apr 2007
12:00
L3

D-brane superpotentials and RG flows on the quintic

Ilka Brunner
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract
    The behaviour of D2-branes on the quintic under complex structure deformations is analysed by combining Landau-Ginzburg techniques with methods from conformal field theory. It is shown that the boundary renormalisation group flow induced by the bulk deformations is realised as a gradient flow of the effective space time superpotential which is calculated explicitly to all orders in the boundary coupling constant.
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