![]() |
Phases of SLEDate: 2015-10-07; view: 360. Simple properties of SLE Many of the results discussed in this section have been proved by Rohde and Schramm [19]. First, we address the question of how the trace (the trajectory of τt) looks for different values of κ. For κ = 0, it is a vertical straight line. As κ increases, the trace should randomly turn to the L or R more frequently. However, it turns out that there are qualitative differences at critical values of κ. To see this, let us first study the process on the real axis. Let xt = gt (x0) − at be the distance between the image at time t of a point which starts at x0 and the image at of the tip. It obeys the stochastic equation
Physicists often write such an equation as Eq. (20) is known as the Bessel process. (If we set Rt = (D − 1)1/2xt/2 and κ2 = 4/(D − 1) it describes the distance Rt from the origin of a Brownian particle in D dimensions.) The point xt is repelled from the origin but it is also subject to a random force. Its ultimate fate can be inferred from the following crude argument: if we ignore the random force,
Fig. 5. A hull evolved from a0 for time t1, then to infinity. The measure on the image of the rest of the curve under gt1 is the same, according to the postulates of SLE, as a hull evolved from at1 to ∞.
Fig. 6. The trace is about to hit the axis at x0 and enclose a region. At the time this happens, the whole region including the point x0 is mapped by gt to the same point at. The opposite is true for κ > 4: points on the real axis are continually colliding with the image at of the tip. This means that the trace is continually touching both itself and the real axis, at the same time engulfing whole regions. Moreover, since it is self-similar object, it does this on all scales, an infinite number of times within any finite neighbourhood! Eventually, the trace swallows the whole half plane: every point is ultimately mapped into at. For κ < 4 only the points on the trace itself suffer this fate. The case κ = 4 is more tricky: in fact the trace is then also a simple curve. When κ is just above 4, the images of points on the real axis under gt collide with at only when there happen to be rare events when the random force is strong enough to overcome the repulsion. When this happens, whole segments of the real axis are swallowed at one time, corresponding to the picture described above. Conversely, for large κ, the repulsive force is negligible except for very small xt. In that case, two different starting points move with synchronised Brownian motions until the one which started off closer to the origin is swallowed. Thus, the real line is eaten up in a continuous fashion rather than piecemeal. There are no finite regions swallowed by the trace which are not on the trace itself. This means that the trace is space-filling: γ intersects every neighbourhood of every point in the upper half plane. We shall argue later (Section 4.3.1) that the fractal dimension of the trace is df = 1 + κ/8 for κ
|