7,299 research outputs found
Spanning trees of graphs on surfaces and the intensity of loop-erased random walk on planar graphs
We show how to compute the probabilities of various connection topologies for
uniformly random spanning trees on graphs embedded in surfaces. As an
application, we show how to compute the "intensity" of the loop-erased random
walk in , that is, the probability that the walk from (0,0) to
infinity passes through a given vertex or edge. For example, the probability
that it passes through (1,0) is 5/16; this confirms a conjecture from 1994
about the stationary sandpile density on . We do the analogous
computation for the triangular lattice, honeycomb lattice and , for which the probabilities are 5/18, 13/36, and
respectively.Comment: 45 pages, many figures. v2 has an expanded introduction, a revised
section on the LERW intensity, and an expanded appendix on the annular matri
Boundary Partitions in Trees and Dimers
Given a finite planar graph, a grove is a spanning forest in which every
component tree contains one or more of a specified set of vertices (called
nodes) on the outer face. For the uniform measure on groves, we compute the
probabilities of the different possible node connections in a grove. These
probabilities only depend on boundary measurements of the graph and not on the
actual graph structure, i.e., the probabilities can be expressed as functions
of the pairwise electrical resistances between the nodes, or equivalently, as
functions of the Dirichlet-to-Neumann operator (or response matrix) on the
nodes. These formulae can be likened to generalizations (for spanning forests)
of Cardy's percolation crossing probabilities, and generalize Kirchhoff's
formula for the electrical resistance. Remarkably, when appropriately
normalized, the connection probabilities are in fact integer-coefficient
polynomials in the matrix entries, where the coefficients have a natural
algebraic interpretation and can be computed combinatorially. A similar
phenomenon holds in the so-called double-dimer model: connection probabilities
of boundary nodes are polynomial functions of certain boundary measurements,
and as formal polynomials, they are specializations of the grove polynomials.
Upon taking scaling limits, we show that the double-dimer connection
probabilities coincide with those of the contour lines in the Gaussian free
field with certain natural boundary conditions. These results have direct
application to connection probabilities for multiple-strand SLE_2, SLE_8, and
SLE_4.Comment: 46 pages, 12 figures. v4 has additional diagrams and other minor
change
On the asymptotics of dimers on tori
We study asymptotics of the dimer model on large toric graphs. Let be a weighted -periodic planar graph, and let
be a large-index sublattice of . For bipartite we
show that the dimer partition function on the quotient
has the asymptotic expansion , where is the area of ,
is the free energy density in the bulk, and is a finite-size
correction term depending only on the conformal shape of the domain together
with some parity-type information. Assuming a conjectural condition on the zero
locus of the dimer characteristic polynomial, we show that an analogous
expansion holds for non-bipartite. The functional form of the
finite-size correction differs between the two classes, but is universal within
each class. Our calculations yield new information concerning the distribution
of the number of loops winding around the torus in the associated double-dimer
models.Comment: 48 pages, 18 figure
Estimating Quantile Families of Loss Distributions for Non-Life Insurance Modelling via L-moments
This paper discusses different classes of loss models in non-life insurance
settings. It then overviews the class Tukey transform loss models that have not
yet been widely considered in non-life insurance modelling, but offer
opportunities to produce flexible skewness and kurtosis features often required
in loss modelling. In addition, these loss models admit explicit quantile
specifications which make them directly relevant for quantile based risk
measure calculations. We detail various parameterizations and sub-families of
the Tukey transform based models, such as the g-and-h, g-and-k and g-and-j
models, including their properties of relevance to loss modelling.
One of the challenges with such models is to perform robust estimation for
the loss model parameters that will be amenable to practitioners when fitting
such models. In this paper we develop a novel, efficient and robust estimation
procedure for estimation of model parameters in this family Tukey transform
models, based on L-moments. It is shown to be more robust and efficient than
current state of the art methods of estimation for such families of loss models
and is simple to implement for practical purposes.Comment: 42 page
Trees and Matchings
In this article, Temperley's bijection between spanning trees of the square
grid on the one hand, and perfect matchings (also known as dimer coverings) of
the square grid on the other, is extended to the setting of general planar
directed (and undirected) graphs, where edges carry nonnegative weights that
induce a weighting on the set of spanning trees. We show that the weighted,
directed spanning trees (often called arborescences) of any planar graph G can
be put into a one-to-one weight-preserving correspondence with the perfect
matchings of a related planar graph H.
One special case of this result is a bijection between perfect matchings of
the hexagonal honeycomb lattice and directed spanning trees of a triangular
lattice. Another special case gives a correspondence between perfect matchings
of the ``square-octagon'' lattice and directed weighted spanning trees on a
directed weighted version of the cartesian lattice.
In conjunction with results of Kenyon, our main theorem allows us to compute
the measures of all cylinder events for random spanning trees on any (directed,
weighted) planar graph. Conversely, in cases where the perfect matching model
arises from a tree model, Wilson's algorithm allows us to quickly generate
random samples of perfect matchings.Comment: 32 pages, 19 figures (minor revisions from version 1
Midwest Technology Assistance Center for Small Public Water Systems Final Report
The Midwest Technology Assistance Center (MTAC) was established October 1, 1998 to provide assistance to small public water systems throughout the
Midwest via funding from the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) under section 1420(f) of the 1996 amendments to the Safe Drinking
Water Act. This report summarizes progress made under USEPA Grant# 832591-01 for funds received in Federal Years (FY) 05 and 06.
MTAC is a cooperative effort of the 10 states of the Midwest (congruent with USEPA regions 5 and 7), led by the Illinois State Water Survey and the
University of Illinois. The director of their Water Resources Institute (WRI) coordinates the participation of each state in MTAC. Dr. Richard Warner
(WRI director) and Kent Smothers were the principal investigators for this project. Kent Smothers serves as the managing director of the center, and is
responsible for conducting routine activities with the advice and counsel of Dr. Richard Warner.published or submitted for publicationis peer reviewe
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