Mark Kac Seminar

June 2, 2006

introduction talks archive contact location

The seminar takes place in Utrecht, Kromme Nieuwegracht 80, room 132.

11:15-13:00 speaker: Jeremie Bouttier (UvA) title: Planar maps and embedded trees

abstract: 

Maps are combinatorial objects arising in physics as the natural discretization of random surfaces used for instance in two-dimensional quantum gravity, as well as in matrix models. After briefly reviewing these relations, I shall present some elementary constructions, that establish correspondences between maps and (embedded) trees. A first application is the enumeration of maps: several results can be (re)derived, and lead to the evaluation of critical exponents for various models of random surfaces. In a second time, I shall show how the constructions can be used to access to a fine information on the intrinsic geometry of maps. Analytical exact results can be obtained thanks to an unexpected "integrability" property.
 

 

14:15-16:00 speaker: Rongfeng Sun (Eurandom) title: Renormalization analysis of hierarchically interacting two-type branching models


abstract:

Linearly interacting diffusions model the evolution of colonies of populations. When the interaction kernel is of an appropriate form and the diffusions are indexed by the hierarchical group, the large scale space-time behavior of the system exhibits universality which can be fully characterized using a renormalization analysis first developed by Dawson and Greven. Such renormalization analysis has previously been successfully carried out for interacting diffusions which are either one-dimensional or live on a compact state space. In most of these cases, there is a single type of large scale space-time behavior and the system exhibits so-called full universality.

In this talk, we give an overview of the renormalization program and then discuss recent progress in the analysis of hierarchically interacting two-type branching diffusions, where each diffusion lives on [0,\infty)^2 and the structure of the system's large scale space-time behavior is much richer. This is work in progress joint with D. Dawson, A. Greven, F. den Hollander and J. M. Swart.
 

 
Mark Kac Seminar 2005-2006  

last updated: 06 jun 2006 by Webmaster