- Series
- Job Candidate Talk
- Time
- Friday, January 13, 2023 - 11:05am for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 006
- Speaker
- Alexander Dunlap – Courant Institute, NYU – alexander.dunlap@cims.nyu.edu – https://cims.nyu.edu/~ajd594/
- Organizer
- Christian Houdré
A pervading question in the study of stochastic PDE is how small-scale random forcing in an equation combines to create nontrivial statistical behavior on large spatial and temporal scales. I will discuss recent progress on this topic for several related stochastic PDEs - stochastic heat, KPZ, and Burgers equations - and some of their generalizations. These equations are (conjecturally) universal models of physical processes such as a polymer in a random environment, the growth of a random interface, branching Brownian motion, and the voter model. The large-scale behavior of solutions on large scales is complex, and in particular depends qualitatively on the dimension of the space. I will describe the phenomenology, and then describe several results and challenging problems on invariant measures, growth exponents, and limiting distributions.