English

Large deviations for the 3D dimer model

Probability 2026-05-08 v3 Mathematical Physics Combinatorics math.MP

Abstract

In 2000, Cohn, Kenyon and Propp studied uniformly random perfect matchings of large induced subgraphs of Z2\mathbb Z^2 (a.k.a. dimer configurations or domino tilings) and developed a large deviation theory for the associated height functions. We establish similar results for large induced subgraphs of Z3\mathbb Z^3. To formulate these results, recall that a perfect matching on a bipartite graph induces a flow that sends one unit of current from each even vertex to its odd partner. One can then subtract a "reference flow'' to obtain a divergence-free flow. We show that the flow induced by a uniformly random dimer configuration converges in law (when boundary conditions on a bounded RR3R \subset \mathbb R^3 are controlled and the mesh size tends to zero) to the deterministic divergence-free flow gg on RR that maximizes Rent(g(x))dx\int_{R} \text{ent}(g(x)) \,dx given the boundary data, where ent(s)\text{ent}(s) is the maximal specific entropy obtained by an ergodic Gibbs measure with mean current ss. The function ent\text{ent} is not known explicitly, but we prove that it is continuous and {\em strictly concave} on the octahedron O\mathcal O of possible mean currents (except on the edges of O\mathcal O) which implies (under reasonable boundary conditions) that the maximizer is uniquely determined. We further establish two versions of a large deviation principle, using the integral above to quantify how exponentially unlikely the discrete random flows are to approximate other deterministic flows. The planar dimer model is mathematically rich and well-studied, but many of the most powerful tools do not seem readily adaptable to higher dimensions. Our analysis begins with a smaller set of tools, which include Hall's matching theorem, the ergodic theorem, non-intersecting-lattice-path formulations, and double-dimer cycle swaps.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2304.08468,
  title  = {Large deviations for the 3D dimer model},
  author = {Nishant Chandgotia and Scott Sheffield and Catherine Wolfram},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2304.08468},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

Final version to appear in Asterisque. Section 5 was moved to Section 7, otherwise minor changes. 156 pages, 40 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T10:08:44.536Z