From Markov Chains To Non-equilibrium Particle Systems (2nd Edition)


Book Description

This book is representative of the work of Chinese probabilists on probability theory and its applications in physics. It presents a unique treatment of general Markov jump processes: uniqueness, various types of ergodicity, Markovian couplings, reversibility, spectral gap, etc. It also deals with a typical class of non-equilibrium particle systems, including the typical Schlögl model taken from statistical physics. The constructions, ergodicity and phase transitions for this class of Markov interacting particle systems, namely, reaction-diffusion processes, are presented. In this new edition, a large part of the text has been updated and two-and-a-half chapters have been rewritten. The book is self-contained and can be used in a course on stochastic processes for graduate students.










From Markov Chains to Non-equilibrium Particle Systems


Book Description

This book is representative of the work of Chinese probabilists on probability theory and its applications in physics. It presents a unique treatment of general Markov jump processes: uniqueness, various types of ergodicity, Markovian couplings, reversibility, spectral gap, etc. It also deals with a typical class of non-equilibrium particle systems, including the typical Schlögl model taken from statistical physics. The constructions, ergodicity and phase transitions for this class of Markov interacting particle systems, namely, reaction-diffusion processes, are presented. In this new edition, a large part of the text has been updated and two-and-a-half chapters have been rewritten. The book is self-contained and can be used in a course on stochastic processes for graduate students.




Aspects of Markov Chains and Particle Systems


Book Description

The thesis concerns asymptotic behavior of particle systems and the underlying Markov chains used to model various natural phenomena. The objective is to describe and analyze stochastic models involving spatial structure and evolution over time. Fundamental objects of interest in such systems include the equilibrium measure which the system converges to, the phenomenon of phase transition in the long term behavior and the time taken to converge to stationarity. In this thesis we present three examples highlighting the above aspects. In Chapter 2, we will discuss Competitive Erosion: a multi-particle system introduced by James Propp in 2003, as a generalization of a fundamental growth model known as Internal Diffusion Limited Aggregation. In this model, each vertex of the graph is occupied by a particle, which can be either red or blue. New red and blue particles are emitted alternately from their respective bases and perform random walk. On encountering a particle of the opposite color they remove it and occupy its position. We consider competitive erosion on discretizations of smooth planar simply connected domains. In Chapter 2 we establish positively, a conjecture of Propp regarding conformal invariance of the the model at stationarity, by showing that, with high probability the blue and the red regions are separated by an orthogonal circular arc on the disc and by a suitable hyperbolic geodesic on a general `smooth' simply connected domain. In Chapter 3, we discuss a family of conservative stochastic processes known as Activated Random Walk (ARW) which interpolates between ordinary random walk and the Stochastic Sandpile; the latter being a canonical example of Self Organized Criticality. These processes are conjectured to exhibit a sharp change in long time behavior depending on the value of certain parameters. Informally ARW is a particle system on Z with mass conservation. One starts with a mass density mu>0 of initially active particles, each of which performs a symmetric random walk at rate one and falls asleep at rate lambda. Sleepy particles become active on coming in contact with other active particles. We investigate the question of fixation/non-fixation of the process and show for small enough lambda, the critical mass density for fixation is strictly less than one. Moreover, the critical density goes to zero as lambda tends to zero. This positively answers two open questions from Dickman, Rolla, Sidoravicius (J. Stat. Phys., 2010) and Rolla, Sidoravicius (Invent. Math., 2012). In Chapter 4, we discuss a model of constrained Glauber dynamics, known as the East Process, exhibiting sharp convergence to equilibrium. The East process is a 1-D kinetically constrained interacting particle system, introduced in the physics literature in the early 90's to model liquid-glass transitions. Informally, it is a two spin (0,1) system on Z, where every site at rate one tries to randomize its spin using a fresh Bernoulli (p). However the move is suppressed unless the site to the left is in the 0 state. Thus the Glauber dynamics move is carried out only in the presence of a certain `kinetic' constraint. Spectral gap estimates of Aldous and Diaconis in 2002 imply that its mixing time on L sites has order L. Since the relaxation time is of a smaller order than the mixing time it is natural to expect a sharp convergence to equilibrium . Proving this, is the goal of this chapter, where we establish Cutoff for mixing, with an optimal window size.




Nonequilibrium Statistical Physics


Book Description

This book presents a united approach to the statistical physics of systems near equilibrium: it brings out the profound unity of the laws which govern them and gathers together results usually fragmented in the literature. It will be useful both as a textbook about irreversible phenomena and as a reference book for researchers.




Probability and Phase Transition


Book Description

This volume describes the current state of knowledge of random spatial processes, particularly those arising in physics. The emphasis is on survey articles which describe areas of current interest to probabilists and physicists working on the probability theory of phase transition. Special attention is given to topics deserving further research. The principal contributions by leading researchers concern the mathematical theory of random walk, interacting particle systems, percolation, Ising and Potts models, spin glasses, cellular automata, quantum spin systems, and metastability. The level of presentation and review is particularly suitable for postgraduate and postdoctoral workers in mathematics and physics, and for advanced specialists in the probability theory of spatial disorder and phase transition.




Continuous-Time Markov Chains and Applications


Book Description

This book gives a systematic treatment of singularly perturbed systems that naturally arise in control and optimization, queueing networks, manufacturing systems, and financial engineering. It presents results on asymptotic expansions of solutions of Komogorov forward and backward equations, properties of functional occupation measures, exponential upper bounds, and functional limit results for Markov chains with weak and strong interactions. To bridge the gap between theory and applications, a large portion of the book is devoted to applications in controlled dynamic systems, production planning, and numerical methods for controlled Markovian systems with large-scale and complex structures in the real-world problems. This second edition has been updated throughout and includes two new chapters on asymptotic expansions of solutions for backward equations and hybrid LQG problems. The chapters on analytic and probabilistic properties of two-time-scale Markov chains have been almost completely rewritten and the notation has been streamlined and simplified. This book is written for applied mathematicians, engineers, operations researchers, and applied scientists. Selected material from the book can also be used for a one semester advanced graduate-level course in applied probability and stochastic processes.




Stochastic Interacting Systems: Contact, Voter and Exclusion Processes


Book Description

Interactive particle systems is a branch of probability theory with close connections to mathematical physics and mathematical biology. This book takes three of the most important models in the area, and traces advances in our understanding of them since 1985. It explains and develops many of the most useful techniques in the field.




Eigenvalues, Inequalities, and Ergodic Theory


Book Description

The first and only book to make this research available in the West Concise and accessible: proofs and other technical matters are kept to a minimum to help the non-specialist Each chapter is self-contained to make the book easy-to-use