Double-dimer pairings and skew Young diagrams (Q547790): Difference between revisions

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Property / author: David Bruce Wilson / rank
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Property / author: David Bruce Wilson / rank
 
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Summary: We study the number of tilings of skew Young diagrams by ribbon tiles shaped like Dyck paths, in which the tiles are ``vertically decreasing''. We use these quantities to compute pairing probabilities in the double-dimer model: Given a planar bipartite graph \(G\) with special vertices, called nodes, on the outer face, the doubledimer model is formed by the superposition of a uniformly random dimer configuration (perfect matching) of \(G\) together with a random dimer configuration of the graph formed from \(G\) by deleting the nodes. The double-dimer configuration consists of loops, doubled edges, and chains that start and end at the boundary nodes. We are interested in how the chains connect the nodes. An interesting special case is when the graph is \(\varepsilon (\mathbb Z \times \mathbb N)\) and the nodes are at evenly spaced locations on the boundary \(\mathbb R\) as the grid spacing \(\varepsilon \rightarrow 0\).
Property / review text: Summary: We study the number of tilings of skew Young diagrams by ribbon tiles shaped like Dyck paths, in which the tiles are ``vertically decreasing''. We use these quantities to compute pairing probabilities in the double-dimer model: Given a planar bipartite graph \(G\) with special vertices, called nodes, on the outer face, the doubledimer model is formed by the superposition of a uniformly random dimer configuration (perfect matching) of \(G\) together with a random dimer configuration of the graph formed from \(G\) by deleting the nodes. The double-dimer configuration consists of loops, doubled edges, and chains that start and end at the boundary nodes. We are interested in how the chains connect the nodes. An interesting special case is when the graph is \(\varepsilon (\mathbb Z \times \mathbb N)\) and the nodes are at evenly spaced locations on the boundary \(\mathbb R\) as the grid spacing \(\varepsilon \rightarrow 0\). / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 05A19 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 05B45 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 60C05 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 82B20 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 05C05 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 05C50 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number: 5913188 / rank
 
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skew Young diagram
Property / zbMATH Keywords: skew Young diagram / rank
 
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double-dimer model
Property / zbMATH Keywords: double-dimer model / rank
 
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grove
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spanning tree
Property / zbMATH Keywords: spanning tree / rank
 
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Property / arXiv ID: 1007.2006 / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 15:10, 18 April 2024

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Double-dimer pairings and skew Young diagrams
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    Double-dimer pairings and skew Young diagrams (English)
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    24 June 2011
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    Summary: We study the number of tilings of skew Young diagrams by ribbon tiles shaped like Dyck paths, in which the tiles are ``vertically decreasing''. We use these quantities to compute pairing probabilities in the double-dimer model: Given a planar bipartite graph \(G\) with special vertices, called nodes, on the outer face, the doubledimer model is formed by the superposition of a uniformly random dimer configuration (perfect matching) of \(G\) together with a random dimer configuration of the graph formed from \(G\) by deleting the nodes. The double-dimer configuration consists of loops, doubled edges, and chains that start and end at the boundary nodes. We are interested in how the chains connect the nodes. An interesting special case is when the graph is \(\varepsilon (\mathbb Z \times \mathbb N)\) and the nodes are at evenly spaced locations on the boundary \(\mathbb R\) as the grid spacing \(\varepsilon \rightarrow 0\).
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    skew Young diagram
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    double-dimer model
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    grove
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    spanning tree
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