Journal of Applied Probability

The annihilating process

Martin O'Hely and Aidan Sudbury
Source: J. Appl. Probab. Volume 38, Number 1 (2001), 223-231.

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.

First Page: Show Hide
Primary Subjects: 60K35
Full-text: Access denied (no subscription detected)
We're sorry, but we are unable to provide you with the full text of this article because we are not able to identify you as a subscriber.
If you have a personal subscription to this journal, then please login. If you are already logged in, then you may need to update your profile to register your subscription. Read more about accessing full-text
Links and Identifiers

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


2012 © Applied Probability Trust

Journal of Applied Probability

Journal of Applied Probability