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Biased tug-of-war, the biased infinity Laplacian, and comparison with exponential cones

We prove that if U\subset\R^n is an open domain whose closure \overline{U} is compact in the path metric, and F is a Lipschitz function on \partial{U}, then for each β\in\R there exists a unique viscosity solution to the β-biased infinity Laplacian equation β|\nabla u| + Δ_\infty u=0 on U that extends F, where Δ_\infty u= |\nabla u|^{-2} \sum_{i,j} u_{x_i}u_{x_ix_j} u_{x_j}. In the proof, we extend the tug-of-war ideas of Peres, Schramm, Sheffield and Wilson, and define the β-biased \eps-game as follows. The starting position is x_0 \in U. At the k^\text{th} step the two players toss a suitably biased coin (in our key example, player I wins with odds of \exp(β\eps) to 1), and the winner chooses x_k with d(x_k,x_{k-1}) < \eps. The game ends when x_k \in \partial{U}, and player II pays the amount F(x_k) to player I. We prove that the value u^{\eps}(x_0) of this game exists, and that \|u^\eps - u\|_\infty \to 0 as \eps \to 0, where u is the unique extension of F to \overline{U} that satisfies comparison with β-exponential cones. Comparison with exponential cones is a notion that we introduce here, and generalizing a theorem of Crandall, Evans and Gariepy regarding comparison with linear cones, we show that a continuous function satisfies comparison with β-exponential cones if and only if it is a viscosity solution to the β-biased infinity Laplacian equation.

preprint2009arXivOpen access

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