Stationary random metrics on hierarchical graphs via $(\min,+)$-type recursive distributional equations
Abstract
This paper is inspired by the problem of understanding in a mathematical sense the Liouville quantum gravity on surfaces. Here we show how to define a stationary random metric on self-similar spaces which are the limit of nice finite graphs: these are the so-called hierarchical graphs. They possess a well-defined level structure and any level is built using a simple recursion. Stopping the construction at any finite level, we have a discrete random metric space when we set the edges to have random length (using a multiplicative cascade with fixed law $m$). We introduce a tool, the cut-off process, by means of which one finds that renormalizing the sequence of metrics by an exponential factor, they converge in law to a non-trivial metric on the limit space. Such limit law is stationary, in the sense that glueing together a certain number of copies of the random limit space, according to the combinatorics of the brick graph, the obtained random metric has the same law when rescaled by a random factor of law $m$. In other words, the stationary random metric is the solution of a distributional equation. When the measure $m$ has continuous positive density on $\mathbf{R}_+$, the stationary law is unique up to rescaling and any other distribution tends to a rescaled stationary law under the iterations of the hierarchical transformation. We also investigate topological and geometric properties of the random space when $m$ is $\log$-normal, detecting a phase transition influenced by the branching random walk associated to the multiplicative cascade.
- Publication:
-
arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- October 2013
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.1310.6116
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1310.6116
- Bibcode:
- 2013arXiv1310.6116K
- Keywords:
-
- Mathematics - Probability;
- Mathematical Physics;
- Mathematics - Dynamical Systems;
- 60G10;
- 82C41;
- 60G18;
- 60J80;
- 60E05
- E-Print:
- 75 pages, 16 figures. This is a substantial improvement of the first version: title changed (formerly "Quantum gravity and (min,+)-type recursive distributional equations"), the presentation has been restyled and new main results added