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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Modeling Market and Regulatory Mechanisms for Pollution Abatement with Sharp and Random Variables

Fielden, Thomas Robert 01 January 2011 (has links)
This dissertation is motivated by the problem of uncertainty and sensitivity in business- class models such as the carbon emission abatement policy model featured in this work. Uncertain model inputs are represented by numerical random variables and a computational methodology is developed to numerically compute business-class models as if sharp inputs were given. A new description for correlation of random variables is presented that arises spontaneously within a numerical model. Methods of numerically computing correlated random variables are implemented in software and represented. The major contribution of this work is a methodology for the numerical computation of models under uncertainty that expresses no preference for unlikelihood of model input combinations. The methodology presented here serves a sharp contrast to traditional Monte Carlo methods that implicitly equate likelihood of model input values with importance of results. The new methodology herein shifts the computational burden from likelihood of inputs to resolution of input space.
2

The geometry of polymers and other results in the KPZ universality class

Zhu, Weitao January 2023 (has links)
This thesis investigates the geometry of polymers and other miscellaneous results in the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) universality class. Directed polymers have enjoyed a rich history in both probability theory and mathematical physics and have connections to several families of statistical mechanical and random growth models that belong to the KPZ universality class [77]. In this thesis, we focus on 2 integrable polymer models, the (1+1)-dimensional continuum directed random polymer (CDRP) and the half-space log-gamma (HSLG) polymer, and study their path properties. For the CDRP, we show both of its superdiffusivity and localization features. Namely, the annealed law of polymer of length t, upon t²/³ superdiffusive scaling, is tight in the space of C( [0, 1])-valued random variables and the quenched law of any point distance pt from the origin on the path a point-to-point polymer (or the endpoint of a point-to-line polymer) concentrates in a O(1) window around a random favorite point Mp,t. The former marks the first pathwise tightness result for positive temperature models and the latter result confirms the “favorite region conjecture” for the CDRP. Moreover, we provide an explicit random density for the quenched distribution around the favorite point Mp,t. The proofs of both results utilize connections with the KPZ equation and our techniques also allow us to prove properties of the KPZ equation itself, such as ergodicity and limiting Bessel behaviors around the maximum. For the HSLG polymers, we combine our localization techniques from the CDRP and the recently developed HSLG line ensemble results [22, 27] with an innovative combinatorial argument to obtain its limiting quenched endpoint distribution from the diagonal in the boundphase (α < 0). This result proves Kardar’s “pinning” conjecture in the case of HSLG polymers[158]. Finally, this thesis also contains two separate works on the tightness of the Bernoulli Gibbsian line ensemble under mild conditions and the upper-tail large deviation principle (LDP) of the asymmetric simple exclusion process (ASEP) with step initial data. In the first work, we prove that under a mild but uniform control of the one-point marginals of the top curve of the line ensemble, i.e. the shape of the top curve as approximately an inverse parabola and asymptotically covering the entire real line after scaling and recentering, the sequence of line ensembles is tight. With a characterization of [109], our tightness result implies the convergence of the Bernoulli Gibbsian line ensemble to the parabolic Airy line ensemble if the top curve converges to the parabolic Airy2 process in the finite dimensional sense. Compared to a similar work of [93], our result applies to line ensembles with possibly random initial and terminal data, instead of a packed initial condition, and does not rely on exact formulas. In our work on the ASEP, we obtain the exact Lyapunov exponent for the height function of ASEP with step initial data and subsequently its upper-tail LDP, where the rate function matches with that of the TASEP given in a variational form in [156].

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