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by wduquette
145 days ago
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The article has a graphic contrasting a "Random" distribution vs. a "Universal" distribution vs. a "Periodic" distribution. I'm guessing the "Random" distribution is actually a Poisson distribution, as that arises naturally in several cases. But the big question is, does this "Universal" distribution match up to any well known probability distribution? Or could it be described by a relatively simple probability distribution function? |
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There have been a large variety of point processes explored in the literature, including some with repulsion properties that give this type of “universality” property. Perhaps unsurprisingly one way to do this is create your point process by taking the eigenvalues of a random matrix, which falls within the class of determinantal point processes [1]. Gibbs point processes are another important class.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determinantal_point_process