On the Boolean model of Wiener sausages (Q937158)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
On the Boolean model of Wiener sausages
scientific article

    Statements

    On the Boolean model of Wiener sausages (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    20 August 2008
    0 references
    Consider a \(d\)-dimensional Brownian path \((W_t)_{t\in[0,T]}\) started at \(0\) and its corresponding Wiener sausage of radius \(r>0\) \[ S_{r,T}=\{y\in \mathbb{R}^d: \|y-W_t\|\leq r\text{ for some }t\in[0,T]\}. \] The Boolean model is the random set \(\Xi\subset\mathbb{R}^d\) obtained as the union of Wiener sausages when each point of a homogeneous Poisson point process serves as the starting point of one Brownian path. By symmetry, the two-point function \[ C(h)=\mathbf{P}[\{0,x\}\subset\Xi]\qquad\text{for \(\|x\|=h\)} \] only depends on the norm of the vector \(x\). It can be computed using the one-point function \(p=\mathbf{P}[0\in\Xi]\), the expected volume of \(S_{r,T}\) (for both quantities there are more or less explicit formulas) and the expected volume of \(S_{r,T}\cap(x+S_{r,T})\). The authors use a Monte Carlo scheme to estimate this latter volume. To this end the Brownian paths are approxiated by random walks with normally distributed increments. They present the estimated curves \(h\mapsto C(h)\) for different values of \(T\) rather than providing numerical values with errors bounds. As an alternative to computing the expected volume of \(S_{r,T}\cap (x+S_{r,T})\), it is enough to compute the expected volume of \(S_{r,T}\cup (x+S_{r,t})\). This, however, has a representation as the integral \[ \int_{\mathbb{R}^d}u(T,y)\,dy, \] where \(u(t,y)\) is the solution of the heat equation with boundary values \(u(t,y)=1\) for \(\|y\|\leq r\) or \(\|y-x\|\leq r\) and \(u(0,y)=0\) for all other \(y\). The authors propagate a finite element scheme to compute \(u\) which is more efficient than the Monte Carlo scheme considered above.
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    Wiener Sausage
    0 references
    Boolean model
    0 references
    Sensor network
    0 references
    Capacity
    0 references
    Volume fraction
    0 references
    Specific surface area
    0 references
    Covariance function
    0 references
    Contact distribution function
    0 references
    Approximation
    0 references
    Heat Conduction problem
    0 references
    Finite element method
    0 references
    Monte Carlo simulation
    0 references
    Stochastic geometry
    0 references
    0 references