4,006 research outputs found
Percolation and local isoperimetric inequalities
In this paper we establish some relations between percolation on a given
graph G and its geometry. Our main result shows that, if G has polynomial
growth and satisfies what we call the local isoperimetric inequality of
dimension d > 1, then p_c(G) < 1. This gives a partial answer to a question of
Benjamini and Schramm. As a consequence of this result we derive, under the
additional condition of bounded degree, that these graphs also undergo a
non-trivial phase transition for the Ising-Model, the Widom-Rowlinson model and
the beach model. Our techniques are also applied to dependent percolation
processes with long range correlations. We provide results on the uniqueness of
the infinite percolation cluster and quantitative estimates on the size of
finite components. Finally we leave some remarks and questions that arise
naturally from this work.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figure
On the size of a finite vacant cluster of random interlacements with small intensity
In this paper we establish some properties of percolation for the vacant set
of random interlacements, for d at least 5 and small intensity u. The model of
random interlacements was first introduced by A.S. Sznitman in arXiv:0704.2560.
It is known that, for small u, almost surely there is a unique infinite
connected component in the vacant set left by the random interlacements at
level u, see arXiv:0808.3344 and arXiv:0805.4106. We estimate here the
distribution of the diameter and the volume of the vacant component at level u
containing the origin, given that it is finite. This comes as a by-product of
our main theorem, which proves a stretched exponential bound on the probability
that the interlacement set separates two macroscopic connected sets in a large
cube. As another application, we show that with high probability, the unique
infinite connected component of the vacant set is `ubiquitous' in large
neighborhoods of the origin.Comment: Accepted for publication in Probability Theory and Related Field
Interlacement percolation on transient weighted graphs
In this article, we first extend the construction of random interlacements,
introduced by A.S. Sznitman in [arXiv:0704.2560], to the more general setting
of transient weighted graphs. We prove the Harris-FKG inequality for this model
and analyze some of its properties on specific classes of graphs. For the case
of non-amenable graphs, we prove that the critical value u_* for the
percolation of the vacant set is finite. We also prove that, once G satisfies
the isoperimetric inequality IS_6 (see (1.5)), u_* is positive for the product
GxZ (where we endow Z with unit weights). When the graph under consideration is
a tree, we are able to characterize the vacant cluster containing some fixed
point in terms of a Bernoulli independent percolation process. For the specific
case of regular trees, we obtain an explicit formula for the critical value
u_*.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the Elect. Journal
of Pro
On the uniqueness of the infinite cluster of the vacant set of random interlacements
We consider the model of random interlacements on introduced
in Sznitman [Vacant set of random interlacements and percolation (2007)
preprint]. For this model, we prove the uniqueness of the infinite component of
the vacant set. As a consequence, we derive the continuity in of the
probability that the origin belongs to the infinite component of the vacant set
at level in the supercritical phase .Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AAP547 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Percolation and isoperimetry on roughly transitive graphs
In this paper we study percolation on a roughly transitive graph G with
polynomial growth and isoperimetric dimension larger than one. For these graphs
we are able to prove that p_c < 1, or in other words, that there exists a
percolation phase. The main results of the article work for both dependent and
independent percolation processes, since they are based on a quite robust
renormalization technique. When G is transitive, the fact that p_c < 1 was
already known before. But even in that case our proof yields some new results
and it is entirely probabilistic, not involving the use of Gromov's theorem on
groups of polynomial growth. We finish the paper giving some examples of
dependent percolation for which our results apply.Comment: 32 pages, 2 figure
Random interlacements and amenability
We consider the model of random interlacements on transient graphs, which was
first introduced by Sznitman [Ann. of Math. (2) (2010) 171 2039-2087] for the
special case of (with ). In Sznitman [Ann. of Math.
(2) (2010) 171 2039-2087], it was shown that on : for any
intensity , the interlacement set is almost surely connected. The main
result of this paper says that for transient, transitive graphs, the above
property holds if and only if the graph is amenable. In particular, we show
that in nonamenable transitive graphs, for small values of the intensity u the
interlacement set has infinitely many infinite clusters. We also provide
examples of nonamenable transitive graphs, for which the interlacement set
becomes connected for large values of u. Finally, we establish the monotonicity
of the transition between the "disconnected" and the "connected" phases,
providing the uniqueness of the critical value where this transition
occurs.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-AAP860 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Soft local times and decoupling of random interlacements
In this paper we establish a decoupling feature of the random interlacement
process I^u in Z^d, at level u, for d \geq 3. Roughly speaking, we show that
observations of I^u restricted to two disjoint subsets A_1 and A_2 of Z^d are
approximately independent, once we add a sprinkling to the process I^u by
slightly increasing the parameter u. Our results differ from previous ones in
that we allow the mutual distance between the sets A_1 and A_2 to be much
smaller than their diameters. We then provide an important application of this
decoupling for which such flexibility is crucial. More precisely, we prove
that, above a certain critical threshold u**, the probability of having long
paths that avoid I^u is exponentially small, with logarithmic corrections for
d=3. To obtain the above decoupling, we first develop a general method for
comparing the trace left by two Markov chains on the same state space. This
method is based in what we call the soft local time of a chain. In another
crucial step towards our main result, we also prove that any discrete set can
be "smoothened" into a slightly enlarged discrete set, for which its
equilibrium measure behaves in a regular way. Both these auxiliary results are
interesting in themselves and are presented independently from the rest of the
paper.Comment: 10 figure
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