The purpose of this book is to introduce two recent topics in
mathematical physics and probability theory: the Schramm-Loewner
evolution (SLE) and interacting particle systems related to random
matrix theory. A typical example of the latter systems is Dyson's
Brownian motion (BM) model. The SLE and Dyson's BM model may be
considered as "children" of the Bessel process with parameter D,
BES(D), and the SLE and Dyson's BM model as "grandchildren" of BM. In
Chap. 1 the parenthood of BM in diffusion processes is clarified and
BES(D) is defined for any D >= 1. Dependence of the BES(D) path
on its initial value is represented by the Bessel flow. In Chap. 2 SLE
is introduced as a complexification of BES(D). Rich mathematics and
physics involved in SLE are due to the nontrivial dependence of the
Bessel flow on D. From a result for the Bessel flow, Cardy's formula
in Carleson's form is derived for SLE. In Chap. 3 Dyson's BM model with
parameter β is introduced as a multivariate extension of BES(D) with
the relation D = β + 1. The book concentrates on the case where β = 2
and calls this case simply the Dyson model.The Dyson model inherits the
two aspects of BES(3); hence it has very strong solvability. That is,
the process is proved to be determinantal in the sense that all
spatio-temporal correlation functions are given by determinants, and all
of them are controlled by a single function called the correlation
kernel. From the determinantal structure of the Dyson model, the
Tracy-Widom distribution is derived.