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Multiple SLEsDate: 2015-10-07; view: 434. Related ideas We pointed out earlier that the boundary operators The expectation value of some observable
where
where
where the right-hand side comes from the variation in The left-hand side may be recognised as the generator (the adjoint of the Fokker–Planck operator) for the stochastic process:
where ρk = 2. [For general values of the parameters ρk this process is known as (radial) We see that eiθj undergoes Brownian motion but is also repelled by the other particles at eiθk(k≠j): these particles are themselves repelled deterministically from eiθj. The infinitesimal transformation αj corresponds to the radial Loewner equation
The conjectured interpretation of this is as follows: we have N non-intersecting curves connecting the boundary points eiθk,0 to the origin. The evolution of the jth curve in the presence of the others is given by the radial Loewner equation with, however, the driving term not being simple Brownian motion but instead the more complicated process Figs. (70) and (71). However, from the CFT point of view we may equally well consider the linear combination ∑jGj. The Loewner equation is now
where
This is known in the theory of random matrices as Dyson's Brownian motion. It describes the statistics of the eigenvalues of unitary matrices. The conjectured interpretation is now in terms of N random curves which are all growing in each other's mutual presence at the same mean rate (measured in Loewner time). From the point of view of SLE, it is by no means obvious that the measure on N curves generated by process Figs. (70), (71) and (72) is the same as that given by Figs. (73) and (74). However, CFT suggests that, for curves which are the continuum limit of suitable lattice models, this is indeed the case.
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