I am interested in long-range percolation models with heavy-tailed degree distributions such as DHH13, GLM21, Y6. The simplest example is scale-free percolation in which vertices are elements $\mathbb{Z}^d$, each vertex $x\in\mathbb{Z}^d$ carries and independent random heavy-tailed weight $W_x>0$ and two vertices $x,y$ are joined by an edge with probability $1-\exp(W_xW_y/|x-y|^\alpha), \alpha>d$, independently (given the weights). If $W_x$ has a first moment but no second moment, then the model is "robust" under Bernoulli percolation, in the sense that almost surely $p_c^{\text{bond}}=p_c^{\text{site}}=0$ for the random graph produced.
Some recent results are concerned with the question of recurrence and transience of simple random walk on the infinite clusters in these percolation models. Specifically, it was shown in HH17, GHMM19 that robust infinite clusters are transient almost surely. The proofs are constructive but quite model specific and are based on a strategy from B2 designed for long-range percolation without weights; they do not use robustness directly in an essential way.
My feeling is that the robustness property (in particular the "site version" $p_c^{\text{site}}=0$) is so strong (for example it implies super-exponential growth) that it should imply transience for a much larger class of infinite random graphs than these rather specific models, for instance unimodular random measures concentrated on robust infinite graphs.
In the case of random trees, $p_c^{\text{bond}}=0$ clearly implies transience but I have so far not found any results in that direction concerning non-tree like graphs.
My questions are:
- Are there any results in the literature that shed light on the structure of random graphs with finite mean degree under the assumption $p_c=0$ or maybe other "extreme" assumptions on growth or isoperimetry?
- Is there an example of a (not necessarily random) graph with $p_c^{\text{site}}=0$ that is recurrent?