Steven N. Evans, Rudolf Grübel, Anton Wakolbinger
Rémy’s algorithm is a Markov chain that iteratively generates a sequence of random trees in such a way that the nnth tree is uniformly distributed over the set of rooted, planar, binary trees with 2n+12n+1 vertices. We obtain a concrete characterization of the Doob–Martin boundary of this transient Markov chain and thereby delineate all the ways in which, loosely speaking, this process can be conditioned to “go to infinity” at large times. A (deterministic) sequence of finite rooted, planar, binary trees converges to a point in the boundary if for each mm the random rooted, planar, binary tree spanned by m+1m+1 leaves chosen uniformly at random from the nnth tree in the sequence converges in distribution as nn tends to infinity—a notion of convergence that is analogous to one that appears in the recently developed theory of graph limits.
We show that a point in the Doob–Martin boundary may be identified with the following ensemble of objects: a complete separable RR-tree that is rooted and binary in a suitable sense, a diffuse probability measure on the RR-tree that allows us to make sense of sampling points from it, and a kernel on the RR-tree that describes the probability that the first of a given pair of points is below and to the left of their most recent common ancestor while the second is below and to the right. Two such ensembles represent the same point in the boundary if for each mm the random, rooted, planar, binary trees spanned by m+1m+1 independent points chosen according to the respective probability measures have the same distribution. Also, the Doob–Martin boundary corresponds bijectively to the set of extreme point of the closed convex set of nonnegative harmonic functions that take the value 11 at the binary tree with 33 vertices; in other words, the minimal and full Doob–Martin boundaries coincide. These results are in the spirit of the identification of graphons as limit objects in the theory of graph limits.
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