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On the heat kernel and the Dirichlet form of Liouville Brownian motion

  
@article{EJP2950,
	author = {Rémi Rhodes and Christophe Garban and Vincent Vargas},
	title = {On the heat kernel and the Dirichlet form of Liouville Brownian motion},
	journal = {Electron. J. Probab.},
	fjournal = {Electronic Journal of Probability},
	volume = {19},
	year = {2014},
	keywords = {Gaussian multiplicative chaos, Liouville brownian motion, heat kernel},
	abstract = {In a previous work, a Feller process called Liouville Brownian motion on $\mathbb{R}^2$ has been introduced. It can be seen as a Brownian motion evolving in a random geometry given formally by the exponential of a (massive) Gaussian Free Field $e^{\gamma\, X}$ and is the right diffusion process to consider regarding $2d$-Liouville quantum gravity.  In this note, we discuss the construction of the associated  Dirichlet form, following essentially Fukushima, Oshima, and Takeda, and the techniques introduced in our previous work. Then we carry  out the analysis of the Liouville resolvent. In particular, we prove that it is strong Feller, thus obtaining the existence of  the  Liouville heat kernel via a non-trivial theorem of Fukushima and al. One of the motivations which led to introduce the Liouville Brownian motion in our previous work was to investigate the puzzling Liouville metric through the eyes of this new stochastic process. In particular,  the theory developed for example in Stollmann and Sturm, whose aim is to capture the "geometry" of the underlying space out of the Dirichlet form of a process living on that space, suggests a notion of distance associated to a Dirichlet form. More precisely, under some mild hypothesis on the regularity of the Dirichlet form, they provide a distance in the wide sense, called intrinsic metric, which is interpreted as an extension of Riemannian  geometry applicable to non differential structures. We prove  that the needed mild hypotheses are satisfied but that the associated intrinsic metric unfortunately vanishes, thus showing that renormalization theory remains out of reach of  the metric aspect  of Dirichlet forms.},
	pages = {no. 95, 1-25},
	issn = {1083-6489},
	doi = {10.1214/EJP.v19-2950},    
        url = {http://ejp.ejpecp.org/article/view/2950}}