Random walk on random planar maps: spectral dimension, resistance, and displacement
Ewain Gwynne, Jason Miller

TL;DR
This paper investigates the behavior of simple random walks on various classes of random planar maps, establishing sharp bounds on key quantities and confirming the spectral dimension as 2, thereby resolving a conjecture for the UIPT case.
Contribution
It provides sharp bounds on Green's function, resistance, and displacement for random planar maps, and proves the spectral dimension is almost surely 2, confirming long-standing conjectures.
Findings
Spectral dimension of these maps is almost surely 2.
Random walk displacement in UIPT is at least n^{1/4 - o(1)} in n steps.
Established sharp bounds on Green's function, resistance, and return probabilities.
Abstract
We study simple random walk on the class of random planar maps which can be encoded by a two-dimensional random walk with i.i.d. increments or a two-dimensional Brownian motion via a "mating-of-trees" type bijection. This class includes the uniform infinite planar triangulation (UIPT), the infinite-volume limits of random planar maps weighted by the number of spanning trees, bipolar orientations, or Schnyder woods they admit, and the -mated-CRT map for . For each of these maps, we obtain an upper bound for the Green's function on the diagonal, an upper bound for the effective resistance to the boundary of a metric ball, an upper bound for the return probability of the random walk to its starting point after steps, and a lower bound for the graph-distance displacement of the random walk, all of which are sharp up to polylogarithmic factors. When combined…
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