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For massless vertex-transitive transient graphs, the percolation phase transition for the level sets of the Gaussian free field on the associated continuous cable system is particularly well understood, and in particular the associated critical parameter $widetilde{h}_*$ is always equal to zero. On general transient graphs, two weak conditions on the graph $mathcal{G}$ are given in arXiv:2101.05800, each of which implies one of the two inequalities $widetilde{h}_*leq0$ and $widetilde{h}_*geq0.$ In this article, we give two counterexamples to show that none of these two conditions are necessary, prove that the strict inequality $widetilde{h}_*<0$ is typical on massive graphs with bounded weights, and provide an example of a graph on which $widetilde{h}_*=infty.$ On the way, we obtain another characterization of random interlacements on massive graphs, as well as an isomorphism between the Gaussian free field and the Doob $mathit{mathbf{h}}$-transform of random interlacements, and between the two-dimensional pinned free field and random interlacements.
We consider the zero-average Gaussian free field on a certain class of finite $d$-regular graphs for fixed $dgeq 3$. This class includes $d$-regular expanders of large girth and typical realisations of random $d$-regular graphs. We show that the leve
We study level-set percolation of the Gaussian free field on the infinite $d$-regular tree for fixed $dgeq 3$. Denoting by $h_star$ the critical value, we obtain the following results: for $h>h_star$ we derive estimates on conditional exponential mom
The Rohde--Schramm theorem states that Schramm--Loewner Evolution with parameter $kappa$ (or SLE$_kappa$ for short) exists as a random curve, almost surely, if $kappa eq 8$. Here we give a new and concise proof of the result, based on the Liouville
In this paper we introduce the two-sided level-set for the two-dimensional discrete Gaussian free field. Then we investigate the chemical distance for the two-sided level-set percolation. Our result shows that the chemical distance should have dimens
These lecture notes offer a gentle introduction to the two-dimensional Discrete Gaussian Free Field with particular attention paid to the scaling limits of the level sets at heights proportional to the absolute maximum. The bulk of the text is based