Link to York University

 

Mathematics and Statistics

    York University
 

 

 

 


 

Professor E.J. Janse van Rensburg

Applied Mathematics Section
Faculty of Science and Engineering

      OFFICIAL WEB SITE


 

 

 

Contact:
Prof. E.J. Janse van Rensburg
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
York University
Toronto, Ontario
M3J 1P3
Canada

 

 

  

 

 

 Phone:(416)-736-2100 X33837

 Email:rensburg@yorku.ca

 

 

Research

·                     Statistical Mechanics

·                     Combinatorics

·                     Monte Carlo Simulations

·                     BioInformatics

·                     Statistical Knot Theory

 



 

Teaching

 

 COURSE WEBPAGES:

Math2041
Math6280



 

Selected Papers (Here are links to journals or pdf-files).

  

 




 

 

Random Maze

Here is a random maze I have generated by Monte Carlo.  Can you find the way out?


 

In reality, a random maze would be much more convoluted than the above example.  Such mazes are less pleasing to the eye. In the case above a maze consisting of walls that spiral from the origin was generated, and then subjected to a Monte Carlo simulation for a short time (before the maze would randomize completely).
 
 
 

Random Tree:

A maze is a special kind of random tree:  in particular, it is a spanning tree of a square in the square lattice (such a maze would have only one way out from the center).  Below is a random tree in the square lattice.


 


Towards the limiting random lattice tree

If the number of edges in the tree above should be multiplied, while the length scale is shrunk appropriately, a limiting random tree will be seen.  In the picture below there are 10000 edges, each too small to be seen here, in a lattice tree generated by a Monte Carlo program.  The tree begins to appear like a fractal object.  The existence of a scaling limit is known in high dimensions (above 8).  There is general consensus that it also exists in dimensions below 9.
 


 


Random Disks

The interior of a closed loop in the square lattice (or a polygon) is a Disk.  In this example, a square lattice polygon was randomized by subjecting it to a Metropolis Monte Carlo algorithm.  The interior of the polygon is a disk.


Die Oranje Vrystaat.

Die foto is in die Noord Vrystaat geneem.