TBan-I

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Nei seguente esercizio useremo le notazioni della statistica dei valori estremi usate nel corso.

exercise 1: La distribuzione di Gumbel

esercizio 2: The weakest link

Exercise 3: number of states above the minimum

Definition of n(x):Given a realization of the random energies E1,E2,,EM, define

n(x)=#{iEmin<Ei<Emin+x}

that is, the number of random variables lying above the minimum

Emin

but less than

Emin+x

. This is itself a random variable. We are interested in its mean value:

n(x)=k=0M1kProb[n(x)=k]

The Final goal is to show that for large 'M', when the extremes are described by the Gumbel distribution :

n(x)=ex/bM1

Step 1: Exact manipulations

Prob[n(x)=k]=M(M1k)dEp(E)[P(E+x)P(E)]k[1P(E+x)]Mk1

To compute n(x), you must sum over k. Use the identity

k=0M1k(M1k)(AB)kBM1k=(AB)ddAk=0M1(M1k)(AB)kBM1k=(M1)(AB)AM2

to arrive at the form:

n(x)=M(M1)dEp(E)[P(E+x)P(E)](1P(E))M2=MdE[P(E+x)P(E)]dQM1(E)dE


Step 2: the Gumbel limit So far, no approximations have been made. To proceed, we use QM1(E)QM(E) and its asymptotics Gumbel form: