Existence and Sharpness of the Phase Transition for the Frog Model on Transitive Graphs

Existence and Sharpness of the Phase Transition for the Frog Model on Transitive Graphs
Topic
Existence and Sharpness of the Phase Transition for the Frog Model on Transitive Graphs
Date & Time
Thursday, May 07, 2026 - 17:00 - 18:00
Speaker
Yuliang Shi, The University of British Columbia
Location
W923, West Hall, NYU Shanghai New Bund Campus

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Abstract: 

The frog model is an interacting particle system that describes the spread of an infection or rumor through a moving population. In the version we consider, the model depends on two parameters, λ and t. On a given graph, each vertex initially contains a Poisson(λ) number of particles (frogs). At time zero, only the particles at the origin are infected, while all others are susceptible. Infected particles perform independent, continuous-time simple random walks, whereas susceptible particles remain stationary until they become infected. Whenever an infected particle encounters a susceptible one, the susceptible particle becomes infected instantaneously. In addition, each infected particle has a finite lifetime t, after which it is removed from the system.
 
We show that, for several classes of transitive graphs, including graphs of polynomial growth and non-amenable graphs, this model exhibits a phase transition between the extinction and survival of infected particles in both parameters. We also prove that this phase transition is necessarily sharp on every vertex-transitive graph. Joint work with Omer Angel, Daniel de la Riva Massaad, and Jonathan Hermon.
 

Biography: 

Yuliang Shi is a fourth-year PhD student at the University of British Columbia and a visiting student at NYU Shanghai. His research interests are in probability theory, with an emphasis on percolation and infection models.

Seminar by the NYU-ECNU Institute of Mathematical Sciences at NYU Shanghai

This event is open to the NYU Shanghai community and Math community.