All Questions
15 questions
2
votes
0
answers
110
views
Moment of the hitting measure of a subgroup
Given a [finitely generated] group $G$ and a finite generating set $S$, a measure $\mu$ will have finite $\alpha$-moment if $\sum_{g \in G} \mu(g) |g|_S^\alpha$ is finite (where $|g|_S$ is the word ...
2
votes
0
answers
202
views
Random walk on a finite group, converging modulo a function
Let $G$ be a finite group, and let $Q$ be a probability measure on $G$. Suppose that $Q$, as a function on $G$, is supported on a conjugacy class $C$. We denote by $Q^{*k}$ the $k$-fold convolution of ...
4
votes
2
answers
359
views
Random walk uniformly hitting a compact set
Suppose $G$ is a locally compact compactly generated group. Let $\mu$ be a probability measure that is:
Adapted to $G$, i.e. there is no proper subgroup $H$ such that $\mu(H)=1$.
Symmetric, i.e. $\...
5
votes
2
answers
389
views
Divergence of Green function of random walks at spectral radius
Let $P=(p(x,y))_{x, y\in N}$ be the transition matrix over countable states $N$.
Consider the generating Green function $G(x, y|t)=\sum_{0}^{\infty} p^n(x, y) t^n$, where $p^n(x,y)$ is the $(x,y)$-...
8
votes
0
answers
211
views
Superharmonic functions and amenability
Let $G$ be a group generated by a finite set $S$. Let $P$ be a Markov operator defined by the uniform measure on $S$. A function is superharmonic if $Pf\leq f$.
Assume that there is a set of non-...
4
votes
1
answer
204
views
Estimates for simple random walks in groups of intermediate growth
I'm looking for references for the rate of escape and return probability for a group of intermediate growth.
Let $0<\alpha < 1$. If the volume growth is $\succeq \mathrm{exp}(n^\alpha)$, then (...
6
votes
1
answer
569
views
Liouville property - a very basic question
Let $\mathbb{F}_2$ be the free group on two generators. By a result of Kaimanovich and Vershik, for each measure $\mu$ on $\mathbb{F}_2$ such that the support of $\mu$ generates $\mathbb{F}_2$, we ...
15
votes
1
answer
1k
views
In how many steps a random walk visits all the elements of a finite group, with a probability 1/2?
This question is a variation of the return to the origin problem.
Let $G$ be the finite group $\mathbb{Z}/n \times \mathbb{Z}/n$ and let the random transformation $T: G \to G$ such that $T(a,b) = (...
2
votes
2
answers
381
views
Speed and absence of non-constant bounded harmonic functions
For a (symmetric) random walks on countable groups generated by $\mu$, there is a "brute-force computation" argument of Avez (1974) that shows that if the entropy $h_\mu$ is trivial then there are no ...
4
votes
1
answer
400
views
Speed of random walks in groups
I've seen some estimates for the decay in $d$ of the probability a SRW makes a distance $d$ in time $n$, but is there any reference for the "speed" of a random walk in a group? I'm interested mostly ...
1
vote
1
answer
578
views
Fundamental inequality of entropy in random walks
I'm looking for a reference for an inequality related to the "fundamental inequality" about entropy and rate of escape of random walks (on the Cayley graph of a group). Namely,
$\textbf{Question}$: ...
5
votes
1
answer
774
views
Probabilities of a random walk exiting a set
Let $F$ be a finite connected set in a graph (soon to be the Cayley graph of a group) and $\mathrm{Ex}_x^F$ be the function on the vertices in $F^c$ which are neighbour to vertices in $F$ defined as ...
2
votes
1
answer
141
views
Spanning subgaph with trivial Poisson boundaries
Assume $\Gamma$ is the Cayley graph of an amenable$^{*}$ group and that the simple random walk has non-trivial Poisson boundary$^{**}$. Is there a spanning connected subgraph $\Gamma'$ of some $k$-...
12
votes
3
answers
552
views
Estimate on currents in Cayley graphs
Take a Cayley graph $\Gamma$ (thought of as an electrical network with all edges having equal resistance) and break one edge $e$ and put a battery there. (Assume the graph has only one end* so that ...
2
votes
0
answers
153
views
Reference request for a result on subsets unlikely to be hit by random walks in a group
Suppose we are performing a random walk in a group. More precisely, we have a finite generating set $S$ of a group $G$ and the probability of walking along generator $s$ is given by $\mu(s)$ for some ...