Open Access
August 2015 Branching random walks and multi-type contact-processes on the percolation cluster of $\mathbb{Z}^{d}$
Daniela Bertacchi, Fabio Zucca
Ann. Appl. Probab. 25(4): 1993-2012 (August 2015). DOI: 10.1214/14-AAP1040

Abstract

In this paper we prove that, under the assumption of quasi-transitivity, if a branching random walk on ${\mathbb{Z}^{d}}$ survives locally (at arbitrarily large times there are individuals alive at the origin), then so does the same process when restricted to the infinite percolation cluster ${\mathcal{C}_{\infty}}$ of a supercritical Bernoulli percolation. When no more than $k$ individuals per site are allowed, we obtain the $k$-type contact process, which can be derived from the branching random walk by killing all particles that are born at a site where already $k$ individuals are present. We prove that local survival of the branching random walk on ${\mathbb{Z}^{d}}$ also implies that for $k$ sufficiently large the associated $k$-type contact process survives on ${\mathcal{C}_{\infty}}$. This implies that the strong critical parameters of the branching random walk on ${\mathbb{Z}^{d}}$ and on ${\mathcal{C}_{\infty}}$ coincide and that their common value is the limit of the sequence of strong critical parameters of the associated $k$-type contact processes. These results are extended to a family of restrained branching random walks, that is, branching random walks where the success of the reproduction trials decreases with the size of the population in the target site.

Citation

Download Citation

Daniela Bertacchi. Fabio Zucca. "Branching random walks and multi-type contact-processes on the percolation cluster of $\mathbb{Z}^{d}$." Ann. Appl. Probab. 25 (4) 1993 - 2012, August 2015. https://doi.org/10.1214/14-AAP1040

Information

Received: 1 November 2013; Revised: 1 February 2014; Published: August 2015
First available in Project Euclid: 21 May 2015

zbMATH: 1319.60165
MathSciNet: MR3348999
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1214/14-AAP1040

Subjects:
Primary: 60K35
Secondary: 60K37

Keywords: approximation , Branching random walk , contact process , critical parameters , percolation cluster

Rights: Copyright © 2015 Institute of Mathematical Statistics

Vol.25 • No. 4 • August 2015
Back to Top