Geodesics and approximate geodesics in critical 2D first-passage percolation

Series
Stochastics Seminar
Time
Thursday, November 6, 2025 - 3:30pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Erik Bates – North Carolina State University – ebates@ncsu.eduhttps://www.ewbates.com/
Organizer
Michael Damron

First-passage percolation on the square lattice is a random growth model in which each edge of Z^2 is assigned an i.i.d. nonnegative weight.  The passage time between two points is the smallest total weight of a nearest-neighbor path connecting them, and a path achieving this minimum is called a geodesic.  Typically, the number of edges in a geodesic is comparable to the Euclidean distance between its endpoints.  However, when the edge-weights take the value 0 with probability exactly 1/2, a strikingly different behavior occurs: geodesics travel primarily on critical clusters of zero-weight edges, whose internal graph distance scales superlinearly with Euclidean distance.  Determining the precise degree of this superlinear scaling is a challenging and ongoing endeavor.  I will discuss recent progress on this front (joint with David Harper, Xiao Shen, and Evan Sorensen), along with complementary results on a dual problem, where we restrict path lengths and analyze passage times (joint with Jack Hanson and Daniel Slonim).