Random walk: Difference between revisions

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m (New page: {{stub-general}} Apparently, the so-called '''random walk''' problem was set out by Karl Pearson in a letter to Nature in 1905 (Ref. 1) <blockquote> "A man starts from a point O and walks ...)
 
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Apparently, the so-called '''random walk''' problem was set out by Karl Pearson in a letter to Nature in 1905 (Ref. 1)
Apparently, the so-called '''random walk''' problem was set out by Karl Pearson in a letter to Nature in 1905 <ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/072294b0 Karl Pearson "The Problem of the Random Walk", Nature '''72''' p. 294 (1905)]</ref>
<ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/35099646 Ian Stewart "Mathematics: Where drunkards hang out", Nature '''413''' pp. 686-687 (2001)]</ref>
<blockquote> "A man starts from a point O and walks l yards in a straight line; he then turns through any angle whatever and walks another l yards in a second straight line. He repeats this process n times. I require the probability that after these n stretches he is at a distance between r and r + dr from his starting point, O."</blockquote>
<blockquote> "A man starts from a point O and walks l yards in a straight line; he then turns through any angle whatever and walks another l yards in a second straight line. He repeats this process n times. I require the probability that after these n stretches he is at a distance between r and r + dr from his starting point, O."</blockquote>
==See also==
*[[Asphericity]]
*[[Ideal chain model]]


==References==
==References==
#[http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/072294b0 Karl Pearson "The Problem of the Random Walk", Nature '''72''' p. 294 (1905)]
<references/>
#[http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/35099646 Ian Stewart "Mathematics: Where drunkards hang out", Nature '''413''' pp. 686-687 (2001)]
[[category: polymers]]
[[category: polymers]]

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Apparently, the so-called random walk problem was set out by Karl Pearson in a letter to Nature in 1905 [1] [2]

"A man starts from a point O and walks l yards in a straight line; he then turns through any angle whatever and walks another l yards in a second straight line. He repeats this process n times. I require the probability that after these n stretches he is at a distance between r and r + dr from his starting point, O."

See also[edit]

References[edit]