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Marco Lenci Full Professor of Mathematical Physics

Marco
Lenci

Department of Physics & Astronomy
University of Bologna

I am a mathematical physicist working at the intersection of dynamical systems, ergodic theory, and probability. My research centers on the long-time behavior of systems that are chaotic, non-compact, or set in random environments — regimes where classical methods break down and new ideas are needed. My main areas include infinite-measure ergodic theory, billiard dynamics, and random walks in disordered (Lévy) media.

A recurring theme across my work is the question of mixing and transport: how does information — or a physical particle — spread through an infinite or aperiodic system over time? This question connects pure mathematics to concrete physics: heat conduction, anomalous diffusion, and the statistical properties of gases.

Aperiodic Lorentz gas — elastic billiard trajectories
Research interests

Where chaos
meets rigor

Infinite Ergodic Theory

Classical ergodic theory assumes finite invariant measures. My work extends mixing and recurrence theory to systems with infinite measure — the natural setting for many physical models of transport and diffusion.

Billiards & Lorentz Gases

Non-compact billiard tables — including infinite-step, semi-dispersing, and cusp billiards — provide geometric models for particle transport. I study their ergodicity, recurrence, hyperbolicity, and anomalous diffusion.

Random Walks in Lévy Media

Random environments whose gap lengths follow heavy-tailed (Lévy) distributions produce anomalous transport. I prove limit theorems — laws of large numbers, CLTs, large deviations — for these models in 1D and beyond.

Mixing & Global Observables

What does it mean for an infinite system to "mix"? I introduced the framework of global-local mixing and global observables, which gives a physically meaningful notion of decorrelation for spatially extended systems.

⟨ψ|

Quantum & Statistical Mechanics

Early work on the ergodic properties of quantum ideal gases, large deviations in quantum lattice systems, and connections between classical billiard geometry and quantum ergodicity.

#check

Formal Mathematics & Lean

I am an advocate of computer-verified proofs and an amateur Lean 4 programmer. I co-organized the 2024 workshop "48 hours in Rome" and the 2025 "ItaLean" conference in Bologna.

Lean 4 & Formal Proofs

Mathematics
you can verify

I am an active advocate for the proof assistant Lean 4 and its mathematical library Mathlib. I believe that computer-verified proofs represent a genuine shift in how mathematics will be done in the (near) future, by humans and machines together.

As an amateur Lean programmer, I explore the formalization of simple and more complicated results, especially in my fields of interest. I co-organized the 2024 workshop "48 hours in Rome" and the December 2025 conference ItaLean — Bridging Formal Mathematics and AI in Bologna.

-- Lean 4 / Mathlib flavor
theorem ergodic_of_mixing
  {α : Type*} [MeasureSpace α]
  (T : α → α)
  (hT : Mixing T) :
  Ergodic T := by
    -- mixing implies ergodicity
    exact hT.toErgodic

Selected Recent Works

Limit theorems and lack thereof for a multilayer random walk mimicking human mobility
with A. Bianchi & F. Pène — preprint (2025)
Uniformly global observables for 1D maps with an indifferent fixed point
with G. Canestrari — preprint (2024)
Internal-wave billiards in trapezoids and similar tables
with C. Bonanno & G. Cristadoro — Nonlinearity 36 (2023)
Limit theorems for Lévy flights on a 1D Lévy random medium
with G. Bet, A. Bianchi, E. Magnanini & S. Stivanello — Electron. J. Probab. 26 (2021)
On infinite-volume mixing
Comm. Math. Phys. 298 (2010) — foundational paper introducing global-local mixing