Determinantal point process

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 129.70.54.135 (talk) at 11:17, 28 June 2017 (→‎Definition). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In mathematics, a determinantal point process is a stochastic point process, the probability distribution of which is characterized as a determinant of some function. Such processes arise as important tools in random matrix theory, combinatorics, physics,[1] and wireless network modeling.[2]

Definition

Let be a locally compact Polish space and be a Radon measure on . Also, consider a measurable function K2 → ℂ.

We say that is a determinantal point process on with kernel if it is a simple point process on with a joint intensity or correlation function (which is the density of its factorial moment measure) given by

for every n ≥ 1 and x1, . . . , xn ∈ Λ.[3]

Properties

Existence

The following two conditions are necessary and sufficient for the existence of a determinantal random point process with intensities ρk.

  • Positivity: For any N, and any collection of measurable, bounded functions φk:Λk → ℝ, k = 1,. . . ,N with compact support:
If
Then
[4]

Uniqueness

A sufficient condition for the uniqueness of a determinantal random process with joint intensities ρk is

for every bounded Borel A ⊆ Λ.[4]

Examples

Gaussian unitary ensemble

The eigenvalues of a random m × m Hermitian matrix drawn from the Gaussian unitary ensemble (GUE) form a determinantal point process on with kernel

where is the th oscillator wave function defined by

and is the th Hermite polynomial. [5]

Poissonized Plancherel measure

The poissonized Plancherel measure on partitions of integers (and therefore on Young diagrams) plays an important role in the study of the longest increasing subsequence of a random permutation. The point process corresponding to a random Young diagram, expressed in modified Frobenius coordinates, is a determinantal point process on ℤ[clarification needed] + 12 with the discrete Bessel kernel, given by:

where

For J the Bessel function of the first kind, and θ the mean used in poissonization.[6]

This serves as an example of a well-defined determinantal point process with non-Hermitian kernel (although its restriction to the positive and negative semi-axis is Hermitian).[4]

Uniform spanning trees

Let G be a finite, undirected, connected graph, with edge set E. Define Ie:E → 2(E) as follows: first choose some arbitrary set of orientations for the edges E, and for each resulting, oriented edge e, define Ie to be the projection of a unit flow along e onto the subspace of 2(E) spanned by star flows.[7] Then the uniformly random spanning tree of G is a determinantal point process on E, with kernel

.[3]

References

  1. ^ Vershik, Anatoly M. (2003). Asymptotic combinatorics with applications to mathematical physics a European mathematical summer school held at the Euler Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia, July 9-20, 2001. Berlin [etc.]: Springer. p. 151. ISBN 978-3-540-44890-7. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  2. ^ N. Deng, W. Zhou, and M. Haenggi. The Ginibre point process as a model for wireless networks with repulsion. IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, vol. 14, pp. 107-121, Jan. 2015.
  3. ^ a b Hough, J. B., Krishnapur, M., Peres, Y., and Virág, B., Zeros of Gaussian analytic functions and determinantal point processes. University Lecture Series, 51. American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c A. Soshnikov, Determinantal random point fields. Russian Math. Surveys, 2000, 55 (5), 923–975.
  5. ^ B. Valko. Random matrices, lectures 14–15. Course lecture notes, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  6. ^ A. Borodin, A. Okounkov, and G. Olshanski, On asymptotics of Plancherel measures for symmetric groups, available via http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/math/9905032.
  7. ^ Lyons, R. with Peres, Y., Probability on Trees and Networks. Cambridge University Press, In preparation. Current version available at http://mypage.iu.edu/~rdlyons/