Interacting Particle Systems: Percolation, Stochastic Domination and Randomly Evolving Environments
Doctoral thesis, 2006

In this thesis we first analyze the class of one-dependent trigonometric determinantal processes and show that they are all two-block-factors. We do this by constructing the two-block-factors explicitly. Second we investigate the dynamic stability of percolation for the stochastic Ising model and the contact process. This is a natural extension of what previously has been done for non-interacting particle systems. The main question we ask is: If we have percolation at a fixed time in a time-dependent but time-invariant system, do we have percolation at all times? A key tool in the analysis is the concept of $\epsilon-$movability which we introduce here. We then proceed by developing and relating this concept to others previously studied. Finally, we introduce a new model which we refer to as the contact process in a randomly evolving environment. By using stochastic domination techniques we will investigate matters of extinction and that of weak and strong survival for this system. We do this by establishing stochastic relations between our new model and the ordinary contact process. In the process, we develop some sharp stochastic domination results for a hidden Markov chain and a continuous time analogue of this.

k-block-factors

stochastic domination

$\epsilon-$movability

stochastic Ising models

percolation

hidden Markov chain

contact process

Determinantal processes

k-dependence

13.15 Euler, Kemigården, Chalmers
Opponent: professor Christian Maes, Institution for theoretical physics, section for mathematical physics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium

Author

Erik Broman

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Mathematics

Subject Categories

Other Mathematics

ISBN

91-7291-762-8

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 2444

13.15 Euler, Kemigården, Chalmers

Opponent: professor Christian Maes, Institution for theoretical physics, section for mathematical physics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium

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Created

10/7/2017