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A random walk in the plane with step size $f(n)$ is cool if there is some constant $C$ such that it returns within a distance $C$ of the origin infinitely many times with probability $1$.

At the $n$-th step it moves $f(n)$ in one of the directions $x,y,-x,-y$ with equal probability.

$f(n)=1$ is cool. Is there a cool $f(n)$ such that $\lim\limits_{n\rightarrow\infty} f(n)=\infty$?

If $f(n)$ eventually dominates $n!$, then $f(n)$ is uncool; is there a sharpest upper bound on the growth rate for $f(n)$ to be cool?

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    Are you dealing with 1-dimensional random walks [you say "returns to the interval (-C,+C)"] or 2-dimensional random walks [you say "one of the directions x,y,-x,-y"]?2012-02-23
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    Here's a rough heuristic that might hold. If $f(n)$ grows slowly, and there isn't any weird modular behavior (e.g. all even steps after a certain time), then at time $n$ the variance of each coordinate is about $\frac{1}{2} \sum_{i=1}^n f(i)^2$. Making a bunch of unsubstantiated independence/smoothness assumptions, you might then expect to hit near $0$ with probability proportional to $\frac{1}{\sum_{i=1}^n f(i)^2}$ (if each coordinate spreads out over a range of size $m$, both numbers might be small with probability about $1/m^2$). (continued next comment)2012-02-24
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    If you take $f(n)$ growing sufficiently slowly, then the expected number of returns near $0$ is infinite, and (again making a bunch of unsubtantiated independence assumptions), you could hope that $f(n)$ is cool.2012-02-24

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