Tumor growth, \(R\)-positivity, multitype branching and quasistationarity
DOI10.1007/s10955-019-02456-4zbMath1460.60094arXiv1906.08446OpenAlexW2951628649MaRDI QIDQ2194159
Pablo Groisman, Analía Ferrari, Krishnamurthi Ravishankar
Publication date: 25 August 2020
Published in: Journal of Statistical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1906.08446
tumor growthLyapunov functionsquasi-stationary distributionmulti-type branching processes\(R\)-positivityDöblin condition
Interacting particle systems in time-dependent statistical mechanics (82C22) Medical applications (general) (92C50) Branching processes (Galton-Watson, birth-and-death, etc.) (60J80)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Branching diffusions, superdiffusions and random media
- \(R\)-positivity, quasi-stationary distributions and ratio limit theorems for a class of probabilistic automata
- On laws of large numbers in \(L^2\) for supercritical branching Markov processes beyond \(\lambda \)-positivity
- Erratum: ``Practical criteria for \(R\)-positive recurrence of unbounded semigroups
- Quasi stationary distributions and Fleming-Viot processes in countable spaces
- Exponential convergence to quasi-stationary distribution and \(Q\)-process
- Spatial Branching in Random Environments and with Interaction
- Speed of coming down from infinity for birth-and-death processes
- Exponential convergence to quasi-stationary distribution for absorbed one-dimensional diffusions with killing
- Weak convergence of conditioned processes on a countable state space
- On quasi-stationary distributions in discrete-time Markov chains with a denumerable infinity of states
- The Exponential Decay of Markov Transition Probabilities
- Ergodic Properties of Continuous-Time Markov Processes and Their Discrete Skeletons
- Extensions of a Limit Theorem of Everett, Ulam and Harris on Multitype Branching Processes to a Branching Process with Countably Many Types
This page was built for publication: Tumor growth, \(R\)-positivity, multitype branching and quasistationarity