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The name "random walk" for a problem of a displacement of a point
in a sequence of independent random steps was coined by Karl
Pearson in 1905 in a question posed to readers of "Nature." The
same year, a similar problem was formulated by Albert Einstein in
one of his Annus Mirabilis works. Even earlier such a problem was
posed by Louis Bachelier in his thesis devoted to the theory of
financial speculations in 1900. Nowadays the theory of random walks
has proved useful in physics and chemistry (diffusion, reactions,
mixing in flows), economics, biology (from animal spread to motion
of subcellular structures) and in many other disciplines. The
random walk approach serves not only as a model of simple diffusion
but of many complex sub- and super-diffusive transport processes as
well. This book discusses the main variants of random walks and
gives the most important mathematical tools for their theoretical
description.
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