The annihilating process
Abstract
An annihilating process is an interacting particle system in which the only interaction is that a particle may kill a neighbouring particle. Since there is no birth and no movement, once a particle has no neighbours its site remains occupied for ever. It is shown that with initial configuration ℤ the distribution of particles at all times is a renewal process and that the probability that a site remains occupied for all time tends to 1/e. Time-dependent behaviour is also calculated for the tree 𝕋r.
Permanent link to this document: http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.jap/996986655
Digital Object Identifier: doi:10.1239/jap/996986655
Mathematical Reviews number (MathSciNet): MR1816125
Zentralblatt MATH identifier: 1001.60102
Journal of Applied Probability