Double Interlacing in Random Tiling Models
Mark Adler, Pierre van Moerbeke

TL;DR
This paper explores complex phase boundaries in large random tiling models, revealing new phenomena like split and soft tacnodes, and introduces a discrete tacnode kernel to analyze tile fluctuations.
Contribution
It introduces the discrete tacnode kernel for analyzing tile fluctuations at complex phase boundaries in non-convex tiling domains.
Findings
Identification of split and soft tacnodes in large tiling domains
Introduction of a discrete tacnode kernel for fluctuation analysis
Connection of the kernel to domino and lozenge tiling models
Abstract
Random tilings of very large domains will typically lead to a solid, a liquid, and a gas phase. In the two-phase case, the solid-liquid boundary (arctic curve) is smooth, possibly with singularities. At the point of tangency of the arctic curve with the domain-boundary, the tiles of a certain shape form for large-size domains a singly interlacing set, fluctuating according to the eigenvalues of the principal minors of a GUE-matrix (Gaussian unitary ensemble). Introducing non-convexities in large domains may lead to the appearance of several interacting liquid regions: they can merely touch, leading to either a split tacnode (also called hard tacnode), with two distinct adjacent frozen phases descending into the tacnode, or a soft tacnode. For appropriate scaling of the nonconvex domains and probing about such split tacnodes, filaments of tiles of a certain type will connect the liquid…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
