39 research outputs found
The bead model and limit behaviors of dimer models
In this paper, we study the bead model: beads are threaded on a set of wires
on the plane represented by parallel straight lines. We add the constraint that
between two consecutive beads on a wire; there must be exactly one bead on each
neighboring wire. We construct a one-parameter family of Gibbs measures on the
bead configurations that are uniform in a certain sense. When endowed with one
of these measures, this model is shown to be a determinantal point process,
whose marginal on each wire is the sine process (given by eigenvalues of large
hermitian random matrices). We prove then that this process appears as a limit
of any dimer model on a planar bipartite graph when some weights degenerate.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AOP398 the Annals of
Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Limit shape and height fluctuations of random perfect matchings on square-hexagon lattices
We study asymptotics of perfect matchings on a large class of graphs called
the contracting square-hexagon lattice, which is constructed row by row from
either a row of a square grid or a row of a hexagonal lattice. We assign the
graph periodic edge weights with period , and consider the
probability measure of perfect matchings in which the probability of each
configuration is proportional to the product of edge weights. We show that the
partition function of perfect matchings on such a graph can be computed
explicitly by a Schur function depending on the edge weights. By analyzing the
asymptotics of the Schur function, we then prove the Law of Large Numbers
(limit shape) and the Central Limit Theorem (convergence to the Gaussian free
field) for the corresponding height functions. We also show that the
distribution of certain type of dimers near the turning corner is the same as
the eigenvalues of Gaussian Unitary Ensemble, and that in the scaling limit
under the boundary condition that each segment of the bottom boundary grows
linearly with respect the dimension of the graph, the frozen boundary is a
cloud curve whose number of tangent points to the bottom boundary of the domain
depends on the size of the period, as well as the number of segments along the
bottom boundary
The critical Z-invariant Ising model via dimers: the periodic case
We study a large class of critical two-dimensional Ising models namely
critical Z-invariant Ising models on periodic graphs, example of which are the
classical square, triangular and honeycomb lattice at the critical temperature.
Fisher introduced a correspondence between the Ising model and the dimer model
on a decorated graph, thus setting dimer techniques as a powerful tool for
understanding the Ising model. In this paper, we give a full description of the
dimer model corresponding to the critical Z-invariant Ising model. We prove
that the dimer characteristic polynomial is equal (up to a constant) to the
critical Laplacian characteristic polynomial, and defines a Harnack curve of
genus 0. We prove an explicit expression for the free energy, and for the Gibbs
measure obtained as weak limit of Boltzmann measures.Comment: 35 pages, 8 figure
Height representation of XOR-Ising loops via bipartite dimers
The XOR-Ising model on a graph consists of random spin configurations on
vertices of the graph obtained by taking the product at each vertex of the
spins of two independent Ising models. In this paper, we explicitly relate loop
configurations of the XOR-Ising model and those of a dimer model living on a
decorated, bipartite version of the Ising graph. This result is proved for
graphs embedded in compact surfaces of genus g.
Using this fact, we then prove that XOR-Ising loops have the same law as
level lines of the height function of this bipartite dimer model. At
criticality, the height function is known to converge weakly in distribution to
a Gaussian free field.
As a consequence, results of this paper shed a light on the occurrence of the
Gaussian free field in the XOR-Ising model. In particular, they prove a
discrete analogue of Wilson's conjecture, stating that the scaling limit of
XOR-Ising loops are "contour lines" of the Gaussian free field.Comment: 41 pages, 10 figure
Loop statistics in the toroidal honeycomb dimer model
The dimer model on a graph embedded in the torus can be interpreted as a
collection of random self-avoiding loops. In this paper, we consider the
uniform toroidal honeycomb dimer model. We prove that when the mesh of the
graph tends to zero and the aspect of the torus is fixed, the winding number of
the collection of loops converges in law to a two-dimensional discrete Gaussian
distribution. This is known to physicists in more generality from their
analysis of toroidal two-dimensional critical loop models and their mapping to
the massless free field on the torus. This paper contains the first
mathematical proof of this more general physics result in the specific case of
the loop model induced by a toroidal dimer model.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-AOP453 the Annals of
Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Statistical mechanics on isoradial graphs
Isoradial graphs are a natural generalization of regular graphs which give,
for many models of statistical mechanics, the right framework for studying
models at criticality. In this survey paper, we first explain how isoradial
graphs naturally arise in two approaches used by physicists: transfer matrices
and conformal field theory. This leads us to the fact that isoradial graphs
provide a natural setting for discrete complex analysis, to which we dedicate
one section. Then, we give an overview of explicit results obtained for
different models of statistical mechanics defined on such graphs: the critical
dimer model when the underlying graph is bipartite, the 2-dimensional critical
Ising model, random walk and spanning trees and the q-state Potts model.Comment: 22 page
The -invariant massive Laplacian on isoradial graphs
We introduce a one-parameter family of massive Laplacian operators
defined on isoradial graphs, involving elliptic
functions. We prove an explicit formula for the inverse of , the
massive Green function, which has the remarkable property of only depending on
the local geometry of the graph, and compute its asymptotics. We study the
corresponding statistical mechanics model of random rooted spanning forests. We
prove an explicit local formula for an infinite volume Boltzmann measure, and
for the free energy of the model. We show that the model undergoes a second
order phase transition at , thus proving that spanning trees corresponding
to the Laplacian introduced by Kenyon are critical. We prove that the massive
Laplacian operators provide a one-parameter
family of -invariant rooted spanning forest models. When the isoradial graph
is moreover -periodic, we consider the spectral curve of the
characteristic polynomial of the massive Laplacian. We provide an explicit
parametrization of the curve and prove that it is Harnack and has genus . We
further show that every Harnack curve of genus with
symmetry arises from such a massive
Laplacian.Comment: 71 pages, 13 figures, to appear in Inventiones mathematica