Superdiffusivity for Brownian motion in a Poissonian potential with long range correlation. I: Lower bound on the volume exponent (Q1930653): Difference between revisions
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English | Superdiffusivity for Brownian motion in a Poissonian potential with long range correlation. I: Lower bound on the volume exponent |
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Superdiffusivity for Brownian motion in a Poissonian potential with long range correlation. I: Lower bound on the volume exponent (English)
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11 January 2013
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Typical trajectories of the Brownian motion are those killed with a homogeneous rate and conditioned to survive till hitting a distant hyperplane. They stay in a tube centered along the direction orthogonal to this hyperplane of diameter \(\sqrt{L}\), whereby \(L\) is the distance between the source of the trajectories and the hyperplane. Adding an inhomogeneous term to the killing rate makes the transversal fluctuation of the trajectories superdiffusive, e.g., of amplitude \(L^{\xi }\) for some \(\xi \in (1/2, 1)\) (\(\xi \) is called the volume exponent). The pertinent inhomogeneity stems from a random (Poissonian) potential \(V\) representing a field of traps whose center locations are given by a Poisson point process, while their radii are distributed according to a common (heavy-tailed) distribution of an unbounded support. The presence of long-range spatial correlations is a crucial difference when compared with Poissonian models studied so far, c.f. a summary of that topic in [\textit{A. S. Sznitman}, Brownian motion, obstacles and random media. Berlin: Springer (1998; Zbl 0973.60003)]. The present analysis is focused on identifying a lower bound for the volume exponent \(\xi \).
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stretched polymer
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quenched disorder
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superdiffusivity
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Brownian motion
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random potential
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Poissonian obstacles
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correlation
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hitting time
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volume exponent
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