Publication

Brownian half-plane excursion and critical Liouville quantum gravity

Juhan Aru, Xin Sun
2022
Journal paper
Abstract

In a groundbreaking work, Duplantier, Miller and Sheffield showed that subcritical Liouville quantum gravity (LQG) coupled with Schramm-Loewner evolutions (SLE) can be obtained by gluing together a pair of Brownian motions. In this paper, we study the counterpart of their result in the critical case via a limiting argument. In particular, we prove that as one sends kappa 'down arrow 4κ4\kappa {\prime } \downarrow 4 in the subcritical setting, the space-filling SLE kappa 'κ_{\kappa {\prime }} in a disk degenerates to the CLE44_4 (where CLE is conformal loop ensembles) exploration introduced by Werner and Wu, along with a collection of independent and identically distributed coin tosses indexed by the branch points of the exploration. Furthermore, in the same limit, we observe that although the pair of initial Brownian motions collapses to a single one, one can still extract two different independent Brownian motions (A,B)(A,B)(A,B) from this pair, such that the Brownian motion AAA encodes the LQG distance from the CLE loops to the boundary of the disk and the Brownian motion BBB encodes the boundary lengths of the CLE44_4 loops. In contrast to the subcritical setting, the pair (A,B)(A,B)(A,B) does not determine the CLE-decorated LQG surface. Our paper also contains a discussion of relationships to random planar maps, the conformally invariant CLE44_4 metric and growth fragmentations.

About this result
This page is automatically generated and may contain information that is not correct, complete, up-to-date, or relevant to your search query. The same applies to every other page on this website. Please make sure to verify the information with EPFL's official sources.

Graph Chatbot

Chat with Graph Search

Ask any question about EPFL courses, lectures, exercises, research, news, etc. or try the example questions below.

DISCLAIMER: The Graph Chatbot is not programmed to provide explicit or categorical answers to your questions. Rather, it transforms your questions into API requests that are distributed across the various IT services officially administered by EPFL. Its purpose is solely to collect and recommend relevant references to content that you can explore to help you answer your questions.