Every two-dimensional incompressible flow follows the level lines of
some scalar function $\psi$ on $\mathbb{R}^2$; transport properties of the flow
depend in part on whether all level lines are bounded. We study the structure
of the level lines when $\psi$ is a stationary random field. We show that under
mild hypotheses there is only one possible alternative to bounded level lines:
the "treelike" random fields, which, for some interval of values of
a, have a unique unbounded level line at each level a, with this
line "winding through every region of the plane." If the random field
has the FKG property, then only bounded level lines are possible. For
stationary $C^2$ Gaussian random fields with covariance function decaying to 0
at $\infty$, the treelike property is the only alternative to bounded level
lines provided the density of the absolutely continuous part of the spectral
measure decays at $\infty$ "slower than exponentially," and only
bounded level lines are possible if the covariance function is nonnegative.
@article{1041903201,
author = {Alexander, Kenneth S.},
title = {Boundedness of level lines for two-dimensional random
fields},
journal = {Ann. Probab.},
volume = {24},
number = {2},
year = {1996},
pages = { 1653-1674},
language = {en},
url = {http://dml.mathdoc.fr/item/1041903201}
}
Alexander, Kenneth S. Boundedness of level lines for two-dimensional random
fields. Ann. Probab., Tome 24 (1996) no. 2, pp. 1653-1674. http://gdmltest.u-ga.fr/item/1041903201/