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Optimal monotone families for the discrete isoperimetric inequality

Background: the discrete isoperimetric inequality Start with a set $X=\{1,2,...,n\}$ of $n$ elements and the family $2^X$ of all subsets of $X$. For a real number $p$ between zero and one, we consider ...
Gil Kalai's user avatar
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14 votes
0 answers
1k views

The threshold for a perfect matching in a random subgraph of a regular bipartite graph?

The following question seems very natural. It is a well known consequence of Hall's Theorem that every regular bipartite graph has a perfect matching. Another classical result states that the ...
Zur Luria's user avatar
  • 1,643
10 votes
0 answers
742 views

Torus Graph Dynamics

Consider the torus graph, or the toroidal grid, which looks like (The graph's vertices are the bold dots). I will discuss only square torus graphs, where there is an equal number of vertices in a "...
co.sine's user avatar
  • 403
10 votes
0 answers
222 views

Asymptotics of subgraph densities in graphons

In Pittel (1989)'s solution to a problem of Knuth (1976) on the expected number of stable matchings between $n$ men and $n$ women under uniform random preferences, it was shown that, as $n \to \infty$,...
Yufei Zhao's user avatar
10 votes
0 answers
533 views

Abelian sandpile models

This question is about a popular probabilistic model on graphs studied in physics, mostly, for the standard lattice in ${\mathbb R}^n$ but also on other graphs (this model is of the same spirit as ...
user avatar
8 votes
0 answers
304 views

"Meritocratic" pyramid schemes

There have been a couple of times in my life when people from multi-level marketing organizations attempted to recruit me. I listened to what they had to say, and both times I did not get involved ...
Favst's user avatar
  • 2,075
8 votes
0 answers
181 views

Self-avoiding walks on strips

A strip is a locally finite graph which admits a quasi-transitive (i.e. finitley many orbits on vertices) action of $\mathbb Z$. A self avoiding walk is a walk which visits no vertex more than once. ...
Florian Lehner's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
100 views

The uniform odd and even subgraph of $\mathbb{Z}^2$

Given a (first finite and later infinite) graph $G =(V,E)$ the uniform even graph is the uniform probability measure on the set of spanning even subgraphs. That is subgraphs (V, E') with $E' \subset E$...
Frederik Ravn Klausen's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
171 views

What is known about the distribution of lengths of the cycle you get by adding an edge to a uniform spanning tree?

Let $G$ be a finite, connected graph. Let $T$ be a uniform spanning tree, and let $e$ be a uniformly random edge not in $T$. When we add $e$ to $T$, we get a subgraph with a unique cycle, $C$. I am ...
Elle Najt's user avatar
  • 1,462
6 votes
0 answers
164 views

Hamilton cycles in random graphs with just enough connectivity

What is the asymptotic probability that $G$ has a Hamilton cycle if $G$ is a random $n$ vertex $\frac{4}{3}n$ edge graph, with minimum degree 2 and without degree 2 vertices at distance 1 or 2 to each ...
Dmytro Taranovsky's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
301 views

Probability that a random multigraph is simple

Question. Consider a given sequence of $n$ integers $d_1$, $d_2$, $\cdots$, $d_n$ with $\sum_i d_i$ even and $d_i\le n$ for all $i$. One may sample a random multi-graph having this degree sequence ...
Matthieu Latapy's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
149 views

Does squaring a directed random graph more than double its out-degree?

As far as I know, it is an unsolved question whether or not this is true: If $G$ is a directed an oriented graph, $G^2$ always has some node whose outdegree is at least double that of its ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
172 views

Uniformly sampling from the set of all simplicial maps

Let $K$ and $L$ be finite simplicial complexes that remain fixed throughout. How does one efficiently sample (according to the uniform distribution) elements from the finite set of simplicial maps ...
Vidit Nanda's user avatar
  • 15.5k
5 votes
0 answers
136 views

What's the variance in the Six Degrees model?

Recall the six degrees of Kevin Bacon game. You can even play the game at The Oracle of Bacon, and their search works via Breadth First Search. I interpret the punchline as saying that if I start ...
David White's user avatar
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4 votes
0 answers
118 views

Reorganizational matching

Motivation. My friend works in an organization that is re-organizing itself in the following somewhat laborious way: There are $n$ people currently sitting on $n$ jobs in total (everyone has one job). ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
1k views

Number of arrangements that contain at least 1 path from top to bottom of 2D matrix

I have a $n\times n$ matrix of objects. $n'$ objects are black, and the rest $n^2-n'$ are white. With that information, I can easily calculate the total number of black element arrangements that exist ...
Cardstdani's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
672 views

Bayesian Networks and Polytree

I am a bit puzzled by the use of polytree to infer a posterior in a Bayesian Network (BN). BN are defined as directed acyclic graphs. A polytree is DAG whose underlying undirected graph is a tree. ...
Bremen's user avatar
  • 41
4 votes
0 answers
94 views

Finding closest set of K disjoint hyperspheres to a point in $\mathbb{R}^n$ with uniform radius

I am interested in the following problem: in $\mathbb{R}^n$, we have $N$ overlapping hyperspheres all with the same radius. Given a point $p$ in $\mathbb{R}^n$, the objective is to find the $K$ non ...
eagle34's user avatar
  • 161
4 votes
0 answers
220 views

Navigation in a graph

The problem Let $G=(V,E)$ be a graph. $k = O\left(\log(|V|)\right)$ distinct vertices are picked randomly from $V$. We call the set of chosen $k$ vertices $T$. Assumptions about the graph: You may ...
real's user avatar
  • 323
4 votes
0 answers
184 views

Does the concept of connective constant make sense for any tiling of the plane?

First let me define what is the "connective constant" of a two dimensional lattice. Let $c_{n}$ denote the number of $n$ step self-avoiding walks starting from a fixed origin point in the lattice. ...
Ritwik's user avatar
  • 3,245
4 votes
0 answers
183 views

Concentration inequality for function of independent Bernoulli r.v.'s (related to random graph)

Consider a random undirected graph on a set of $n$ nodes, say $\{1,2,\ldots,n\}$, such that the probability of edge between nodes $i$ and $j$ is $p_{ij}$ (we may assume $p_{ij}=o(1)$ for all $i,j$, i....
adas's user avatar
  • 163
4 votes
0 answers
128 views

Metrized categories

Motivation: Let $\Gamma = (V,E)$ be a directed graph. To each edge $e \in E$, choose a value $\kappa^e \in \mathbb R$, representing the cost of transporting one unit of "stuff" through the edge. Let $\...
Tom LaGatta's user avatar
  • 8,512
4 votes
0 answers
256 views

Graph distance of close points within the minimum spanning tree

My question is the following: Given $N$ uniform IID points $X=(X_1,...,X_N)$ on the unit cube of $\mathbb{R}^d$, take $X_1$ and another point, say $X_{(1)}$, "close" to $X_1$ (i.e. connected to $X_1$ ...
kaleidoscop's user avatar
  • 1,352
4 votes
0 answers
617 views

Expected number of components with multiple cycles in a subgraph of a square lattice

Short version Is there an understanding of the emergence and subsequent disappearance of components with zero, one, or more cycles in a random subgraph of a square or cubic lattice, as the edge-...
Niel de Beaudrap's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
580 views

Monotonic properties of harmonic functions on graphs

I have a question concerning monotonic properties of "generalized harmonic functions" on graphs. I am a physicist and I didn't take any separate courses in neither graph theory nor discrete harmonic ...
Michał Oszmaniec's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
81 views

Can we remove the restriction on a parameter in Talagrand concentration inequality?

Recently I am trying to use Talagrand concentration inequality to do something on graphs. I find a version from the book of Molloy and Reed ''Graph Colouring and Probabilistics Method''. I attached a ...
Xin Zhang's user avatar
  • 1,190
3 votes
0 answers
87 views

Is the probability distribution of a graphon given as a graph limit computable?

Let $G_i$ be a sequence of finite graphs that is Cauchy in the space of graphons. That is, for every $\epsilon \in \mathbb Q_+$ there is a $N \in \mathbb N$ such that $$\forall n, m > N. \delta_\...
Christopher King's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
190 views

Probabilistic optimization problem on tree vertex selection without replacement proportional to the degree

We are given a tree $T(V,E)$ with $|V|=n$ vertices, where $V=\{v_1,v_2,\ldots, v_n\}$. We denote by $d_i$ the degree of vertex $v_i$ for all $i\in\{1,2,\ldots,n\}$. In a sequential fashion, we select ...
Penelope Benenati's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
83 views

Growth models with lookahead

Given a connected graph $G$ with a connected subgraph $H$, we can consider the uniform distribution on the set of all sequences $H_0, H_1, \dots, H_r$ where $r = |E(G) \setminus E(H)|$, $H_0 = H$, $...
James Propp's user avatar
  • 19.7k
3 votes
0 answers
98 views

Asymptotic results on statistical graph models

This post is partly inspired by this post. Reference request: results on the asymptotic distribution of singular values related to a random orthogonal matrix While it is well-known that two basic ...
Henry.L's user avatar
  • 8,071
3 votes
0 answers
151 views

Sequential generation of any random graph

The high-level question is: can we generate any random graph with size $d$ using a Markov chain? For example, let $X^{(0)} = (1,0,\ldots,0) \in R^d$ be the initial state, and $X^{(t+1)} = f^{(t)}(X^{...
Minkov's user avatar
  • 1,127
3 votes
0 answers
474 views

What is the expected Cheeger constant of a random graph?

Recall that the Cheeger constant (AKA isoperimetric constant) of a graph $G$ is the infimum of $\frac{\partial S}{vol S}$ over all subsets $S$ of $G$ with volume no larger than $vol(G)/2$. I would ...
Paul Siegel's user avatar
  • 29.2k
3 votes
0 answers
146 views

The mean number of vertices in small connected components of random geometric graphs

I place $N$ points on a circular plane of radius $R$, and draw edges to connect points that are less than or equal to some distance $D$ to form a set of graphs or cliques $G_i$. As a function of $N$, ...
EclipseInterlude's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
229 views

For Ising models on finite graphs, is the gradient of Z (w/r/t coupling and field) easier to compute than Z?

Suppose we have a graph $G$ with $n$ vertices, edgeset $E$, $\mathcal{X}=\{1,-1\}^n$. The partition function of the spin-1/2 Ising model on $G$ is $$Z(J,h)=\sum_{x\in \mathcal{X}} \exp\left(J \sum_{(...
Yaroslav Bulatov's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
51 views

Subgraphs of random graphs with a given degree sequence

Let $\mathbf{d}=(d_1,\dots, d_n)$ be a given degree sequence with $3\leq d_i\leq \Delta$ for every $i$, where $\Delta$ is constant. Let $G(n,\mathbf{d})$ denote the random graph uniformly distributed ...
35T41's user avatar
  • 143
2 votes
0 answers
215 views

An approach to the prime number theorem with Rademacher variables and a recursive formula for the prime pi function?

Consider the bipartite graphs defined here: Why is this bipartite graph a partial cube, if it is? We do random walks on them with equal propability and since the graphs are finite and connected the ...
mathoverflowUser's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
90 views

Odd $k$-cycle counts in graph with adjacency matrix $A$ is leading term in $\operatorname{tr} A^k$?

In a recent paper of Neeman, Radin, and Sadun, Moderate Deviations in Cycle Count, in the first line of section 7.3 they wrote $\tau_k(A)=\frac{\operatorname{tr}A^k}{n^k}+O(\frac 1n)$, but I don't ...
MikeG's user avatar
  • 715
2 votes
0 answers
344 views

Probability that a graph and its complement are connected

It's well known that for any graph $G = (V,E)$ that if $G$ is not connected, then its compliment $\overline{G}$ is connected. So, it's impossible to have both $G$ and $\overline{G}$ be disconnected. ...
MathManiac5772's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
321 views

Why do we assume that $\mathcal{A}$ is an algebra in this 2003 paper of Bobkov and Tetali?

In Bobkov and Tetali - Modified Log-Sobolev Inequalities, Mixing and Hypercontractivity (extended version Modified Logarithmic Sobolev Inequalities in Discrete Settings), at the beginning of section 3,...
Ella Sharakanski's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
83 views

Zero-One law for Hamiltonian path subgraphs of Hamming Distance Graphs?

$(\alpha,\beta,d)$-Hamming Distance Graph $G_d(\alpha,\beta)$ for $\alpha,\beta\in(0,1]$ is a graph on $2^d$ vertices $v_0,\dots,v_{2^d-1}$ with edges $(v_i,v_j)\in\mathcal E(G_d)$ iff $0<\sum_{t=1}...
Turbo's user avatar
  • 13.9k
2 votes
0 answers
173 views

Why do larger random matrices maximize their number of clusters with lower densities?

Consider a matrix whose elements are independently assigned a value $1$ with probability $p$ and a value $0$ with probability $1-p$. Define a cluster of cells as a maximal connected component in the ...
alphauser's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
103 views

Is this correct: Inflection points of Euler number graph in Island-Mainland transition correspond to spanning cluster site percolation threshold?

I'm writing with respect to the paper Khatun, Dutta, and Tarafdar - "Islands in Sea" and "Lakes in Mainland" phases and related transitions simulated on a square lattice. Here's a link to a PDF ...
user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
159 views

Distribution of path probabilities for a finite absorbing Markov chain

I am interested in the distribution of path probabilities for a finite absorbing (but otherwise well behaved) Markov chain. Has this topic been considered in the literature? A bit of Googling ...
Steve Huntsman's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
115 views

Influence of independent variables on boolean functions?

Suppose a simple connected graph $G$ where its vertices are assumed to be independent. An event with uncertainty corresponds to each vertex. My instructor guides me that even though the vertices (...
hhh's user avatar
  • 143
2 votes
0 answers
66 views

Fixing (non)-independency of a the subfamilies of finitely many events.

I'm would be interesting in any construction of a probability space with n events (n is given), where for every subset of these events, it is also given whether or not, the family is mutually ...
Nicolas Juillet's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
83 views

Asymptotic results in unbalanced left $d$-regular expander graphs

Let $U = [n]$ and $V = [m]$ be sets of nodes with $n > m$ and $E = U\times V$ be a set of edges. Let $\mathcal{N}(S)$ be the set of neighbors of a subset $S$ from $U$ or $V$. Call a graph $G = (U, ...
rodms's user avatar
  • 409
2 votes
0 answers
108 views

Shortest loop containing 0 in continuum percolation

I am interersted in continuum percolation with intensity $\lambda>0$. Formally, let $X$ be a Poisson point process in $\mathbb{R}^d$ with intensity $\lambda$ and $G$ the graph obtained by ...
kaleidoscop's user avatar
  • 1,352
2 votes
0 answers
81 views

Subgraphs of bounded tree-width and preserving edges of original graph

Given a graph $G$, I would like to determine a method for randomly generating subgraphs $G'$ with the following properties: Each edge of $G$ has at least some probability $p$ of going into $G'$ The ...
David Harris's user avatar
  • 3,475
2 votes
0 answers
285 views

Connectivity in random points on a grid using a rope of fixed length.

This problem is a by product of another problem. I would like to restate this problem as a sort of a puzzle. Suppose we have a $l \times b$ grid. We select $k$ points on the grid randomly and ...
SpringCoder's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
41 views

Asymptotic mixing time and Euclidean probability distance for path graphs

We are given a simple path graph $P(V,E)$ with vertex set $V$ and edge set $E$, having $n=|V|$ nodes. Given an initial distribution $\mathbf{\mu}$ over $V$, let $d_t(\mathbf{\mu},\pi)$ be defined as $\...
Penelope Benenati's user avatar