arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1804.04608 [math.PR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Cutoff for the mean-field zero-range process

Mathieu Merle, Justin Salez

Published 2018-04-12Version 1

We study the mixing time of the unit-rate zero-range process on the complete graph, in the regime where the number $n$ of sites tends to infinity while the density of particles per site stabilizes to some limit $\rho>0$. We prove that the worst-case total-variation distance to equilibrium drops abruptly from $1$ to $0$ at time $n\left(\rho+\frac{1}{2}\rho^2\right)$. More generally, we determine the mixing time from an arbitrary initial configuration. The answer turns out to depend on the largest initial heights in a remarkably explicit way. The intuitive picture is that the system separates into a slowly evolving solid phase and a quickly relaxing liquid phase. As time passes, the solid phase {dissolves} into the liquid phase, and the mixing time is essentially the time at which the system becomes completely liquid. Our proof combines meta-stability, separation of timescale, fluid limits, propagation of chaos, entropy, and a spectral estimate by Morris (2006).

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1811.03520 [math.PR] (Published 2018-11-08)
Cutoff for the mean-field zero-range process with bounded monotone rates
arXiv:2104.10478 [math.PR] (Published 2021-04-21)
The mean-field Zero-Range process with unbounded monotone rates: mixing time, cutoff, and Poincaré constant
arXiv:1606.02703 [math.PR] (Published 2016-06-08)
Mixing time for exclusion and interchange processes on hypergraphs