From 6c8e5849392cc2541bbdb84d43ce4be2d7fe4319 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yuchen Pei Date: Thu, 1 Jul 2021 12:20:22 +1000 Subject: Removed files no longer in use. Also renamed agpl license file. --- .../2013-06-01-q-robinson-schensted-paper.html | 52 ---------------------- 1 file changed, 52 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 site-from-md/posts/2013-06-01-q-robinson-schensted-paper.html (limited to 'site-from-md/posts/2013-06-01-q-robinson-schensted-paper.html') diff --git a/site-from-md/posts/2013-06-01-q-robinson-schensted-paper.html b/site-from-md/posts/2013-06-01-q-robinson-schensted-paper.html deleted file mode 100644 index 2ccaf87..0000000 --- a/site-from-md/posts/2013-06-01-q-robinson-schensted-paper.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,52 +0,0 @@ - - - - - A \(q\)-weighted Robinson-Schensted algorithm - - - - - -
- - -
- -
-
-

A \(q\)-weighted Robinson-Schensted algorithm

-

Posted on 2013-06-01

- - - - - - - Untitled - - - - -

In this paper with Neil we construct a \(q\)-version of the Robinson-Schensted algorithm with column insertion. Like the usual RS correspondence with column insertion, this algorithm could take words as input. Unlike the usual RS algorithm, the output is a set of weighted pairs of semistandard and standard Young tableaux \((P,Q)\) with the same shape. The weights are rational functions of indeterminant \(q\).

-

If \(q\in[0,1]\), the algorithm can be considered as a randomised RS algorithm, with 0 and 1 being two interesting cases. When \(q\to0\), it is reduced to the latter usual RS algorithm; while when \(q\to1\) with proper scaling it should scale to directed random polymer model in (O’Connell 2012). When the input word \(w\) is a random walk:

-

\begin{align*}\mathbb P(w=v)=\prod_{i=1}^na_{v_i},\qquad\sum_ja_j=1\end{align*}

-

the shape of output evolves as a Markov chain with kernel related to \(q\)-Whittaker functions, which are Macdonald functions when \(t=0\) with a factor.

- - - -
-
- - -- cgit v1.2.3