ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
This paper is interested in the description of the density of particles evolving according to some optimal policy of an impulse control problem. We first fix sets on which the particles jump and explain how we can characterize such a density. We then investigate the coupled case in which the underlying impulse control problem depends on the density we are looking for : the mean field games of impulse control. In both cases, we give a variational characterization of the densities of jumping particles.
We study the long time behaviour of the kinetic Fokker-Planck equation with mean field interaction, whose limit is often called Vlasov-Fkker-Planck equation. We prove a uniform (in the number of particles) exponential convergence to equilibrium for t
This work establishes the equivalence between Mean Field Game and a class of compressible Navier-Stokes equations for their connections by Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equations. The existence of the Nash Equilibrium of the Mean Field Game, and hence the
We prove the exponential convergence to the equilibrium, quantified by Renyi divergence, of the solution of the Fokker-Planck equation with drift given by the gradient of a strictly convex potential. This extends the classical exponential decay result on the relative entropy for the same equation.
In the present work, we study deterministic mean field games (MFGs) with finite time horizon in which the dynamics of a generic agent is controlled by the acceleration. They are described by a system of PDEs coupling a continuity equation for the den
We study the relaxation to equilibrium for a class linear one-dimensional Fokker-Planck equations characterized by a particular subcritical confinement potential. An interesting feature of this class of Fokker-Planck equations is that, for any given