6,941 research outputs found
Spectra of random linear combinations of matrices defined via representations and Coxeter generators of the symmetric group
We consider the asymptotic behavior as of the spectra of random
matrices of the form where for each the random variables are i.i.d.
standard Gaussian and the matrices are obtained by applying
an irreducible unitary representation of the symmetric group on
to the transposition that interchanges and
[thus, is both unitary and self-adjoint, with all eigenvalues
either +1 or -1]. Irreducible representations of the symmetric group on
are indexed by partitions of . A consequence of
the results we establish is that if
is the partition of corresponding to , is the corresponding conjugate partition of (i.e., the Young
diagram of is the transpose of the Young diagram of ),
for each , and
for each , then the spectral
measure of the resulting random matrix converges in distribution to a random
probability measure that is Gaussian with random mean and variance
, where is the constant and
is a standard Gaussian random variable.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AOP418 the Annals of
Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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An Analysis of “Meme Haylay Haylay and His Turquoise” using Joseph Campbell’s Model of the Hero’s Journey
Rayleigh processes, real trees, and root growth with re-grafting
The real trees form a class of metric spaces that extends the class of trees
with edge lengths by allowing behavior such as infinite total edge length and
vertices with infinite branching degree. Aldous's Brownian continuum random
tree, the random tree-like object naturally associated with a standard Brownian
excursion, may be thought of as a random compact real tree. The continuum
random tree is a scaling limit as N tends to infinity of both a critical
Galton-Watson tree conditioned to have total population size N as well as a
uniform random rooted combinatorial tree with N vertices. The Aldous--Broder
algorithm is a Markov chain on the space of rooted combinatorial trees with N
vertices that has the uniform tree as its stationary distribution. We construct
and study a Markov process on the space of all rooted compact real trees that
has the continuum random tree as its stationary distribution and arises as the
scaling limit as N tends to infinity of the Aldous--Broder chain. A key
technical ingredient in this work is the use of a pointed Gromov--Hausdorff
distance to metrize the space of rooted compact real trees.Comment: 48 Pages. Minor revision of version of Feb 2004. To appear in
Probability Theory and Related Field
Quasistationary distributions for one-dimensional diffusions with killing
We extend some results on the convergence of one-dimensional diffusions
killed at the boundary, conditioned on extended survival, to the case of
general killing on the interior. We show, under fairly general conditions, that
a diffusion conditioned on long survival either runs off to infinity almost
surely, or almost surely converges to a quasistationary distribution given by
the lowest eigenfunction of the generator. In the absence of internal killing,
only a sufficiently strong inward drift can keep the process close to the
origin, to allow convergence in distribution. An alternative, that arises when
general killing is allowed, is that the conditioned process is held near the
origin by a high rate of killing near infinity. We also extend, to the case of
general killing, the standard result on convergence to a quasistationary
distribution of a diffusion on a compact interval.Comment: 40 pages, final version accepted for Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. except
for a graphi
Asymptotic evolution of acyclic random mappings
An acyclic mapping from an element set into itself is a mapping
such that if for some and , then .
Equivalently, for sufficiently large.
We investigate the behavior as of a Markov chain on the
collection of such mappings. At each step of the chain, a point in the
element set is chosen uniformly at random and the current mapping is modified
by replacing the current image of that point by a new one chosen independently
and uniformly at random, conditional on the resulting mapping being again
acyclic. We can represent an acyclic mapping as a directed graph (such a graph
will be a collection of rooted trees) and think of these directed graphs as
metric spaces with some extra structure. Heuristic calculations indicate that
the metric space valued process associated with the Markov chain should, after
an appropriate time and ``space'' rescaling, converge as to a
real tree (-tree) valued Markov process that is reversible with respect to
a measure induced naturally by the standard reflected Brownian bridge. The
limit process, which we construct using Dirichlet form methods, is a Hunt
process with respect to a suitable Gromov-Hausdorff-like metric. This process
is similar to one that appears in earlier work by Evans and Winter as the limit
of chains involving the subtree prune and regraft tree (SPR) rearrangements
from phylogenetics.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figure
Balls-in-boxes duality for coalescing random walks and coalescing Brownian motions
We present a duality relation between two systems of coalescing random walks
and an analogous duality relation between two systems of coalescing Brownian
motions. Our results extends previous work in the literature and we apply it to
the study of a system of coalescing Brownian motions with Poisson immigration.Comment: 13 page
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