Laplacian growth, sandpiles and scaling limits
Abstract
Laplacian growth is the study of interfaces that move in proportion to harmonic measure. Physically, it arises in fluid flow and electrical problems involving a moving boundary. We survey progress over the last decade on discrete models of (internal) Laplacian growth, including the abelian sandpile, internal DLA, rotor aggregation, and the scaling limits of these models on the lattice Zd as the mesh size goes to zero. These models provide a window into the tools of discrete potential theory: harmonic functions, martingales, obstacle problems, quadrature domains, Green functions, smoothing. We also present one new result: rotor aggregation in Zd has O(log r) fluctuations around a Euclidean ball, improving a previous power-law bound. We highlight several open questions, including whether these fluctuations are O(1).
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