PhD studentship on Large Deviation Rate Function and Variance for Inhomogeneous Corner Growth Processes (2019)

A three-and-a-half year studentship for a UK or EU student which covers fees and living expenses

What you get

You will receive:

  • fully-funded tuition fees      for 3 and a half years (at the UK/EU rate)
  • a tax free bursary for      living costs for 3 and a half years. For 2018/19 this is £14,777 per year.
  • a research training support      grant for 3 and a half years of £1,650 per year.

You may also supplement your income with paid teaching (with your supervisor’s agreement).

Type of award

Postgraduate Research

PhD project

Consider a two-dimensional lattice where each lattice site is given a random weight according to some background probability distribution. Given two lattice points, the maximum over all possible paths connecting them of the sum of the weights is called last passage time and it is the purpose of last passage percolation models to study the properties of the last passage time.

Models of last passage percolation are well-studied, particularly when they exhibit certain integrability properties that make them analytically tractable. The importance arises from rigorous connections between a handful of those models and random matrix theory. Limiting laws for the last passage time (the main object of study) are the same as those for the limiting laws for the largest eigenvalue of certain random matrix ensembles. These are called Tracy-Widom laws and they are synonymous with membership of the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) class. While it is expected that a wide range of models belong to this class, this universality result has remained so far elusive. The proposed projects delve into a model that is partially in the KPZ class but already exhibits behaviour that it is not expected or predicted by the fully integrable models.

Specific problems

  • The law of large numbers for the last passage time is cast as a variational formula, and when explicit calculations can be performed (depending on the discontinuities of the macroscopic speed function) there is strong suggestion that the variance of the model behaves in various different ways. In fact, heuristic numerical evidence suggests that the model can simultaneously have two directions with difference order for the variance. The idea is to rigorously understand this behaviour, in as general a way as we can.
  • There are several examples in which the limiting last passage constant (the scaling limit of the last passage time up to point (nx, ny)) exhibits flat regions. Flat regions in last passage percolation arise very rarely when the environment has continuous distributions, and they affect the shape of the large deviation rate function (a measure of how rare an exponentially unlikely event is). As a first approach, we would like to compute the rate function explicitly for some models, and then show its existence and properties. Moreover, we can ask the same questions for the maximal paths and shape of maximisers for the variational formula. This aspect of the project will also involve a serious application of Monte Carlo simulations.

For more information, please see:

1) Federico Ciech and Nicos Georgiou. Last passage percolation in an exponential environment with discontinuous rates.

https://arxiv.org/abs/1808.00917

2) Nicos Georgiou, Rohini Kumar, and Timo Seppäläinen: TASEP with discontinuous jump rates.

ALEA 7: 293-318, 2010.

https://arxiv.org/abs/1003.3218

Eligibility

You should have or will soon complete a UK Master's level degree in Mathematics, or the non-UK equivalent.

You should be a UK/European Union (EU) student who has been resident in the UK/EU for at least three years.

You should have a strong interest in research coupled with outstanding technical and/or theoretical skills.  You must have the ability to manage resources, be able to work independently and to organize and lead small team activities. 

Applicants must have English ability above IELTS 6.0

Deadline

1 December 2019 12:00

How to apply

Apply through the Sussex on-line postgraduate application system accessible from:

https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/phd/degrees/mathematics-phd

https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/phd/apply

In the Other Information/Funding Section state that you are applying for "PhD studentship on Large Deviation Rate Function and Variance for Inhomogeneous Corner Growth Processes with Dr Nicos Georgiou and Prof Enrico Scalas".

Finally, send an email to Dr Georgiou (n.georgiou@sussex.ac.uk) and Prof Scalas (e.scalas@sussex.ac.uk) to confirm that you have applied.

Please note that candidates will be interviewed shortly after submission, and that the position will be filled as quickly as possible, therefore, please treat the deadline as tentative.  

 

Contact us

Informal enquiries are welcome and should be directed to Dr. Nicos Georgiou n.georgiou@sussex.ac.uk (Profile page: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/profiles/329373) and Prof. Enrico Scalas, e.scalas@sussex.ac.uk (Profile page: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/profiles/330303).

Timetable

Students are encouraged to apply, or at least send an expression of interest, as early as possible. The studentship will be filled as soon as a suitable candidate can be found and the deadline should be treated as tentative.

Possible start dates are 15 January 2020, or 15 May 2020.

The last possible date that applications can be considered is 1st December 2019.

Availability

At level(s):
PG (research)

Application deadline:
1 December 2019 12:00 (GMT)
the deadline has now expired

Countries

The award is available to people from these specific countries: