6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125b934

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Fractional Laplacians in bounded domains: Killed, reflected, censored, and taboo Lévy flights.

Vladimir A. StephanovichPiotr Garbaczewski

subject

Pure mathematicsQuantum PhysicsStochastic processmedia_common.quotation_subjectPhysical systemAmbiguity01 natural sciencesDirichlet distribution010305 fluids & plasmassymbols.namesakeLévy flightBounded function0103 physical sciencessymbolsNeumann boundary conditionMathematics - Numerical Analysis010306 general physicsBrownian motionCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematical PhysicsMathematics - ProbabilityMathematicsmedia_common

description

The fractional Laplacian $(- \Delta)^{\alpha /2}$, $\alpha \in (0,2)$ has many equivalent (albeit formally different) realizations as a nonlocal generator of a family of $\alpha $-stable stochastic processes in $R^n$. On the other hand, if the process is to be restricted to a bounded domain, there are many inequivalent proposals for what a boundary-data respecting fractional Laplacian should actually be. This ambiguity holds true not only for each specific choice of the process behavior at the boundary (like e.g. absorbtion, reflection, conditioning or boundary taboos), but extends as well to its particular technical implementation (Dirchlet, Neumann, etc. problems). The inferred jump-type processes are inequivalent as well, differing in their spectral and statistical characteristics. In the present paper we focus on L\'evy flight-induced jump-type processes which are constrained to stay forever inside a finite domain. That refers to a concept of taboo processes (imported from Brownian to L\'evy - stable contexts), to so-called censored processes and to reflected L\'evy flights whose status still remains to be settled on both physical and mathematical grounds. As a byproduct of our fractional spectral analysis, with reference to Neumann boundary conditions, we discuss disordered semiconducting heterojunctions as the bounded domain problem.

10.1103/physreve.99.042126https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31108727