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We study a non-reversible random walk advected by the symmetric simple exclusion process, so that the walk has a local drift of opposite sign when sitting atop an occupied or an empty site. We prove that the back-tracking probability of the walk exhibits a sharp transition as the density of particles in the underlying exclusion process varies across a critical density c. Our results imply that the speed v=v () of the walk is a strictly monotone function and that the zero-speed regime is either absent or collapses to a single point, c, thus solving a conjecture of arXiv: 1906. 03167. The proof proceeds by exhibiting a quantitative monotonicity result for the speed of a truncated model, in which the environment is renewed after a finite time horizon L. The truncation parameter L is subsequently pitted against the density to carry estimates over to the full model. Our strategy is somewhat reminiscent of certain techniques recently used to prove sharpness results in percolation problems. A key instrument is a combination of renormalisation arguments with refined couplings of environments at slightly different densities, which we develop in this article. Our results hold in fact in greater generality and apply to a class of environments with possibly egregious features, outside perturbative regimes.
Conchon--Kerjan et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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