The "true" self-avoiding walk with bond repulsion is a nearest neighbor random walk on $\mathbb{Z}$, for which the probability of jumping along a bond of the lattice is proportional to $\exp(-g \cdot$ number of previous jumps along that bond). First we prove a limit theorem for the distribution of the local time process of this walk. Using this result, later we prove a local limit theorem, as $A \rightarrow \infty$, for the distribution of $A^{-2/3}X_{\theta_{s/A}}$, where $\theta_{s/A}$ is a random time distributed geometrically with mean $e^{-s/A}(1 - e^{-s/A})^{-1} = A/s + O(1)$. As a by-product we also obtain an apparently new identity related to Brownian excursions and Bessel bridges.
CITATION STYLE
Toth, B. (2007). The “True” Self-Avoiding Walk with Bond Repulsion on $\mathbb{Z}$: Limit Theorems. The Annals of Probability, 23(4). https://doi.org/10.1214/aop/1176987793
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