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Arctic circles, domino tilings and random square Young tableaux
Probability| Speaker: | Dan Romik, UC Davis |
| Location: | 1147 MSB |
| Start time: | Wed, Oct 28 2009, 4:10PM |
Description
If you tile a large checkerboard randomly with dominoes, the resulting
tiling has local statistics that are more or less spatially
homogeneous. However, if you choose a random domino tiling of a domain
that looks like a (discrete version of a) square rotated by 45
degrees, called the "Aztec diamond", Jockusch, Propp and Shor proved
that the tiling is far from being homogeneous: In fact, there will be
a "frozen" region consisting of dominoes that align in a perfect non-
random brickwork pattern adjacent to each of the 4 corners of the
diamond, and a "temperate" region where the true randomness is, and
the shape of the temperate region is asymptotically exactly the disk
inscribed in the diamond. Such an "arctic circle" shape has been
observed in several other random combinatorial models, one of them
arising in the study of random square Young tableaux. In this talk I
will describe a new proof of a more detailed version of the arctic
circle theorem that also describes accurately the domino statistics
inside the temperate region, and use it to explain why the arctic
circle phenomenon for random domino tilings and the one for random
square Young tableaux are more closely related than was previously
thought.
