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The exact noise and dynamical sensitivity of critical percolation, via the Fourier spectrum
Probability| Speaker: | Gabor Pete, University of Toronto and MSRI |
| Location: | 2112 MSB |
| Start time: | Wed, Nov 12 2008, 4:10PM |
Description
Let each site of the triangular lattice (or edge of the \Z^2 lattice) have
an independent Poisson clock switching between open and closed. So, at any
given moment, the configuration is just critical percolation. In
particular, the probability of a left-right open crossing in an n*n box is
roughly 1/2, and, on the infinite lattice, almost surely there are only
finite open clusters.
In the box, how long do we have to wait before we lose essentially all
information about having a left-right open crossing? In the infinite
lattice, are there random exceptional times when there are infinite
clusters? In joint work with Christophe Garban and Oded Schramm, we gave
quite complete answers: exceptional times do exist on both lattices, and
the Hausdorff dimension of their set is computed to be 31/36 for the
triangular lattice.
The indicator function of a percolation crossing event is a function on
the hypercube {-1,+1}^{sites or edges}, and thus it has a Fourier-Walsh
expansion. Our proofs are based on giving sharp concentration results for
the ``weight'' of the Fourier coefficients at different frequencies.
