We consider a general random walk loop soup which includes,
or is related to, several models of interest, such as the spin
model, the double dimer model and the Bose gas. The analysis of this model is
challenging because of the presence of spatial interactions between the loops. For this
model it is known from earlier work (Comm. Math. Phys. 400:3 (2023),
2081–2136) that macroscopic loops occur in dimension three and higher
when the inverse temperature is large enough. Our first result is that, on the
-dimensional
lattice, the presence of repulsive interactions is responsible for a shift
of the critical inverse temperature, which is
strictly greater than
, the
critical value in the noninteracting case. Our second result is that a positive
density of microscopic loops exists for all values of the inverse temperature.
This implies that, in the regime in which macroscopic loops are present,
microscopic and macroscopic loops
coexist. We show that, even though the
increase of the inverse temperature leads to an increase of the total loop
length, the density of microscopic loops
is uniformly bounded from above
in the inverse temperature. Our last result is confined to the special case
in which the random walk loop soup is the one associated to the spin
model with arbitrary
integer values of
and states that, on
,
the probability that two vertices are connected by a loop
decays at least polynomiallyfast with their distance.
Keywords
random walk loop soups, spin systems, self-avoiding walks,
dimers