On the critical parameters of branching random walks
Abstract
Given a discrete spatial structure X, we define continuous-time branching processes that model a population breeding and dying on X. These processes are usually called branching random walks. They are characterized by breeding rates kxy (governing the rate at which individuals at x send offspring to y), and by a multiplicative speed parameter λ. These processes also serve as models for epidemic spreading, where λ kxy represents the infection rate from x to y. Two critical parameters of interest are the global critical parameter λw, related to global survival, and the local critical parameter λs, related to survival within finite sets (with λwλs). In disease control, the primary goal is to lower λ so that the process dies out, at least locally. Nevertheless, a process that survives globally can still pose a threat, especially if sudden changes cause global survival to transition into local survival. In fact, local modifications to the rates can affect the values of both critical parameters, making it important to understand when and how they can be increased. Using results on the comparison of extinction probabilities for a single branching random walk across different sets, we extend the analysis to extinction probabilities and critical parameters of pairs of branching random walks whose rates coincide outside a fixed set A ⊂eq X. We say that two branching random walks are equivalent if their rates coincide everywhere except on a finite subset of X. Given an equivalence class of branching random walks, we prove that if one process has λ*w ≠ λ*s, then λ*w is the maximal possible value of this parameter within the class. We describe the possible configurations for the critical parameters within these equivalence classes.
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