Abstract

We consider a process of noncolliding q-exchangeable random walks on making steps 0 (‘straight’) and −1 (‘down’). A single random walk is called q-exchangeable if under an elementary transposition of the neighboring steps the probability of the trajectory is multiplied by a parameter . Our process of m noncolliding q-exchangeable random walks is obtained from the independent q-exchangeable walks via the Doob’s h-transform for a nonnegative eigenfunction h (expressed via the q-Vandermonde product) with the eigenvalue less than 1. The system of m walks evolves in the presence of an absorbing wall at 0. The repulsion mechanism is the q-analogue of the Coulomb repulsion of random matrix eigenvalues undergoing Dyson Brownian motion. However, in our model, the particles are confined to the positive half-line and do not spread as Brownian motions or simple random walks. We show that the trajectory of the noncolliding q-exchangeable walks started from an arbitrary initial configuration forms a determinantal point process, and express its kernel in a double contour integral form. This kernel is obtained as a limit from the correlation kernel of q-distributed random lozenge tilings of sawtooth polygons. In the limit as , with γ > 0 fixed, and under a suitable scaling of the initial data, we obtain a limit shape of our noncolliding walks and also show that their local statistics are governed by the incomplete beta kernel. The latter is a distinguished translation invariant ergodic extension of the two-dimensional discrete sine kernel.

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