Seminar | March 15 | 3:10-4 p.m. | 340 Evans Hall

 Tom Hutchcroft, CalTech

 Department of Statistics

Statistical mechanics models undergoing a phase transition often exhibit rich, fractal-like behaviour at their critical points, which are described in part by critical exponents – the indices governing the power-law growth or decay of various quantities of interest. These exponents are expected to depend on the dimension but not on the microscopic details of the model such as the choice of lattice. After much progress over the last thirty years, we now understand two-dimensional and high-dimensional models rather well, but intermediate dimensions such as three remain mysterious. I will discuss these issues in the context of long-range and hierarchical percolation and describe how we can now compute some critical exponents for the hierarchical model in all dimensions.

 lfzhang@berkeley.edu, 510-0000000

 Lingfu Zhang,  lfzhang@berkeley.edu,  510-000-0000

Event Date
-
Status
Happening As Scheduled
Primary Event Type
Seminar
Location
340 Evans Hall
Performers
Tom Hutchcroft, CalTech
Event ID
151991