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arXiv:2003.04362 [cond-mat.stat-mech]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Monte Carlo study of the tip region of branching random walks evolved to large times

D. Le Anh, A. H. Mueller, S. Munier

Published 2020-03-09Version 1

We implement a discretization of the one-dimensional branching Brownian motion in the form of a Monte Carlo event generator, designed to efficiently produce ensembles of realizations in which the rightmost lead particle at the final time $T$ is constrained to have a position $X$ larger than some predefined value $X_{\text{min}}$. The latter may be chosen arbitrarily far from the expectation value of $X$, and the evolution time after which observables on the particle density near the lead particle are measured may be as large as $T\sim 10^4$. We then calculate numerically the probability distribution $p_n(\Delta x)$ of the number $n$ of particles in the interval $[X-\Delta x,X]$ as a function of $\Delta x$. When $X_{\text{min}}$ is significantly smaller than the expectation value of the position of the rightmost lead particle, i.e. when $X$ is effectively unconstrained, we check that both the mean and the typical values of $n$ grow exponentially with $\Delta x$, up to a linear prefactor and to finite-$T$ corrections. When $X_{\text{min}}$ is picked far ahead of the latter but within a region extending over a size of order $\sqrt{T}$ to its right, the mean value of the particle number still grows exponentially with $\Delta x$, but its typical value is lower by a multiplicative factor consistent with $e^{-\zeta\Delta x^{2/3}}$, where $\zeta$ is a number of order unity. These numerical results bring strong support to recent analytical calculations and conjectures in the infinite-time limit.

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