The intermediate disorder regime for directed polymers in dimension $1+1$
Tom Alberts, Konstantin Khanin, Jeremy Quastel

TL;DR
This paper introduces an intermediate disorder regime for 1+1 dimensional directed polymers, revealing new fluctuation behaviors and convergence to Tracy-Widom distributions under a specific scaling of inverse temperature.
Contribution
It establishes a new scaling regime between weak and strong disorder, showing universal fluctuation phenomena and convergence to known distributions for directed polymers.
Findings
Polymer endpoint fluctuations match simple random walk exponents.
Fluctuations influenced by environment, no self-averaging occurs.
Endpoint distribution converges to a random measure with Tracy-Widom marginals.
Abstract
We introduce a new disorder regime for directed polymers in dimension that sits between the weak and strong disorder regimes. We call it the intermediate disorder regime. It is accessed by scaling the inverse temperature parameter to zero as the polymer length tends to infinity. The natural choice of scaling is . We show that the polymer measure under this scaling has previously unseen behavior. While the fluctuation exponents of the polymer endpoint and the log partition function are identical to those for simple random walk (), the fluctuations themselves are different. These fluctuations are still influenced by the random environment, and there is no self-averaging of the polymer measure. In particular, the random distribution of the polymer endpoint converges in law (under a diffusive scaling of space) to a random…
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