by Sigurdur Stefansson (Uppsala University)

Europe/Stockholm
122:026

122:026

Description
A planar map is a discretization of the two-sphere into a finite number of polygons. Planar maps appear in physics for example as models of random surfaces in two dimensional quantum gravity and as Feynman diagrams in matrix models. I will discuss a model of random planar maps which is defined by assigning non-negative Boltzmann weights to each polygon where the weight depends only on its degree. I will explain the phase diagram of the model and how it can be understood by considering the phase diagram of a model of random trees called simply generated trees. The main tool is the Bouttier-Di Francesco-Guitter bijection between planar maps and a class of labeled trees called mobiles. By throwing away labels one can, via another bijection, relate the mobiles to the model of simply generated trees. A novel result is that for certain choices of Boltzmann weights a unique large face, having degree proportional to the total number of edges in the maps, appears with high probability when the maps are large. This corresponds to a recently studied phenomenon of condensation in simply generated trees where a vertex having degree proportional to the size of the trees appears. In this case the planar maps, with a properly rescaled graph metric, are shown to converge in distribution towards Aldous' Brownian tree in the Gromov-Hausdorff topology.