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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
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
7 votes
2 answers
235 views

Evolution of the empirical mean of a list as we remove elements proportional to their value

Consider a list of $N$ integers $k_1,k_2,\dots k_N$, drawn independently from some distribution $P(k)$ with $k_i \geq 1$. We denote its mean with $\langle k\rangle=\sum_{k=1}kP(k)$. The first two ...
papad's user avatar
  • 274
7 votes
1 answer
155 views

Nearest neighbors on random complete graph

Consider the complete graph on $2n$ vertices, where the ${2n \choose 2}$ edges have distinct lengths in uniform random order. So each vertex $v$ has a nearest neighbor $N(v)$, across the shortest ...
David Aldous's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
286 views

Finding an easy example applying the general Lovász local lemma

Is there any easy application for the general local lemma as follows? If someone knows, please tell me the references or just post an example here. Thanks. General Lovász local lemma: Consider a set $...
Xin Zhang's user avatar
  • 1,190
2 votes
2 answers
165 views

Example of random walk in a random environment (RWRE) saying things on the environment

I was wondering if anyone is aware of works/articles/examples where random walks in a random environment (RWRE) are actually used for obtaining information on the random environment. To clarify a bit, ...
Cal's user avatar
  • 59
1 vote
0 answers
68 views

A one-sided/monotone version of min/max-stable distributions -- does this have a name?

In a couple of papers I am working on (in random graph theory) I have encountered the following property of certain probability distributions, which I will describe shortly, and I am wondering if this ...
Joel Ottar's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
248 views

Connected components in random regular graphs

Suppose we take a random regular graph $G_{2n, r}$, where $n$ is large. Let us also assume that $r$ is fixed, (not dependent on $n$). Let's say that half of the vertices of the graph are colored black ...
SMS's user avatar
  • 1,407
1 vote
0 answers
46 views

Diameter of component graph of uniform spanning forests on the amenable transitive graph with super polynomial growth

According to the paper Benjamini, Kesten, Peres, and Schramm - Geometry of the uniform spanning forest: transitions in dimensions 4, 8, 12 (Annals, 2004), the diameter of the component graph of the ...
none Yuan's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
148 views

Union of two copies of uniform spanning forest on $\mathbb{Z}^3$ is transient? [closed]

Let $G$ be the (random) graph which is the union of two independent copies of the uniform spanning forest on $\mathbb{Z}^3$. Question: Is (the simple random walk on) $G$ transient almost surely?
none Yuan's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
543 views

Vertex degree on random graphs

Let $p = d/n$ with $d$ constant. How do I prove that, with high probability, $G_{n,p}$ contains a vertex of degree at least $(\log n)^{1/2}$, where $G_{n,p}$ is a graph with $n$ vertices and the ...
Nir Kfir's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
216 views

Quasi-random vs pseudo-random graphs

My question is somehow concerning terminology on extremal graph theory. Is there any difference concerning the notion of quasi-random graph and the notion of pseudo-random graph? My feeling is that ...
Johnny Cage's user avatar
  • 1,561
1 vote
0 answers
82 views

Concavity of expected size of a maximum matching (in a bipartite graph) w.r.t. edge probability

Given a n*n bipartite graph where each edge (between any two nodes on the opposite side) is formed i.i.d. with probability $p$, can we show a concavity result on the expected size of a maximum ...
messi22's user avatar
  • 53
1 vote
0 answers
96 views

Limit of alternating sum of factorial moments which diverge

Consider the non-negative, integer valued random variable $X$, and its $i^{\text{th}}$ factorial moment $E_{i}[X]$. Then we have that $$ P(X=0) = \sum _{i=0}^{\infty} \frac{(-1)^i E_{r}[X]}{ i!} $$ ...
apg's user avatar
  • 640
0 votes
0 answers
69 views

Likelihood ratio of non-trivial cycles in an inhomogeneous random square lattice graph embedded on a toroidal surface

Consider a square lattice (random) graph $G$ embedded on a toroidal surface. Each edge $(i, j)$ of the graph has an associated likelihood probability $p_{ij}$. The probabilities $p_{ij}$ come from a ...
Sanchayan Dutta's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
180 views

What to do when the second moment method does not provide a sufficient bound for $P(X=0)$

We have that for a real valued random variable $X$, $$ P(X=0) \leq \frac{\text{Var}(X)}{\left(\mathbb{E}(X)\right)^2} $$ known as Chebyshev's inequality. Consider a random variable $X \in \{0,1,2,\...
apg's user avatar
  • 640
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
1 vote
0 answers
167 views

Width of the critical window in a random graph

In an Erdős–Rényi random graph $G(n,p)$, the giant component emerges with thresholding function $p(n) = c/n$, where $c>1$. When $c=1$, and $\lambda \in \mathbb{R}$, we can write or "...
apg's user avatar
  • 640
1 vote
1 answer
313 views

What is the exact definition of a sharp transition?

In "Sharp threshold phenomena in statistical physics", H. Duminil-Copin, Japanese J. of Math. 14, 2019, a sharp transition of a boolean function is defined as follows: A sequence of ...
apg's user avatar
  • 640
6 votes
2 answers
717 views

Threshold function for a graph not being planar

A graph property $\mathcal{P}$ is monotone increasing if $G\in \mathcal{P}$ implies $G+e \in \mathcal{P}$, i.e., adding an edge to a graph does not destroy the property. It is well-known that every ...
W. Paul Liu's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
152 views

Discrepancy of random bipartite graphs (2)

This question is a modification of the one asked here, which turned out to ask for something too strong to be true. Given $k>0$ and a positive integer $n$, let $X, Y$ be two vertex sets of size $n$ ...
Antoine Labelle's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
192 views

Discrepancy of random bipartite graphs

This is a crosspost from MathStackExchange (original question). Fix $k>0$ and let $X, Y$ be two vertex sets of size $n$ a positive integer (we're interested in the limit $n\to \infty$). Define a ...
Antoine Labelle's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
492 views

(Asymmetric) matrix power series in closed form: $\sum_{i=0}^{\infty} A^i \left(A^i\right)^{\top}={?}$

Let $A\in \mathbb{S}^{N\times N}$ be a symmetric, real and stable matrix, i.e., $\rho(A)<1$, where $\rho(A)$ stands for the spectral radius of $A$. Then, $$\sum\limits_{i=0}^{\infty} A^{2i}=\left( ...
Augusto Santos's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
183 views

Which infinite random graphs with percolation threshold $p_c=0$ are transient?

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{...
Christian Mönch's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
602 views

Hammersley-Clifford theorem

The paper spatial interaction and the statistical analysis of lattice systems by Besag (1974) presents an alternative proof for the Hammersley-Clifford theorem. In order to prove the HM theorem, Besag ...
BelwarDissengulp's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
836 views

Probability of an edge in a random graph

Consider a vertex set $V$ and a degree sequence $(d_v)_{v\in V}$. I want to know the probability that an edge exists between two given vertices $u$ and $v$ in a random graph with this degree sequence. ...
Matthieu Latapy's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
165 views

Is a random $(r+1,r)$-biregular bipartite graph $r$-edge connected w.h.p?

A uniformly random $r$-regular bipartite graph on $n$ vertices is known to be $r$-edge connected. That is, with high probability as $n$ grows large, the minimum size of a cut in a random $r$-regular ...
Karagounis Z's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
131 views

how to compute the probability that a random graph has two components? [closed]

This question is an example in the book Introduction to Probability Models 11th edition (Sheldon M.Ross). 3.6.2 A random graph: A graph has $V$ nodes and a set $A$ of pairs of nodes in $V$ called arcs....
Xin Niu's user avatar
  • 113
1 vote
0 answers
78 views

Canonical representation of the a probability distribution for Hammersley Clifford Theorem

I'm reading the following paper http://www2.stat.duke.edu/~scs/Courses/Stat376/Papers/GibbsFieldEst/BesagJRSSB1974.pdf On page 7 they give the result that $$Q(\textbf{x}) = \sum_{1 \leq i \leq n} ...
Pavan Sangha's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
124 views

Empirical degree distribution of random $n$ vertices labeled rooted tree converges to Poisson distribution

I am reading Louigi's lecture note on random trees and graphs here. I get stuck on part (b), Exercise 1.2.3 on page 19, which says the following: Let $T_n$ be uniformly drawn from $\mathcal{T}_n$, ...
MikeG's user avatar
  • 715
6 votes
1 answer
521 views

Graphs resembling the math genealogy graph must have concentration in a small number of families?

I was talking with a non-mathematician the other week at a workshop about the fact that many mathematicians, like myself, are indexed in the math genealogy database. We talked a little about how many ...
Josiah Park's user avatar
  • 3,209
1 vote
0 answers
97 views

Longest close common subsequence but for continuous random variables

We have two copied sequences of correlated continuous positive random variables that are independent of each other $(X_{n})\perp(Y_{n})$ and equal in distribution $X_{n}\stackrel{dis}{=}Y_{n}$ for ...
Thomas Kojar's user avatar
  • 5,474
1 vote
0 answers
87 views

Contiguity of uniform random regular graphs and uniform random regular graphs which have a perfect matching

Let us consider $\cal{G}_{_{n,d}}$ as the uniform probability space of d-regular graphs on the n vertices $\{1, \ldots, n \}$ (where $dn$ is even). We say that an event $H_{_{n}}$ occurs a.a.s. (...
Hossein's user avatar
  • 19
1 vote
1 answer
286 views

Bound on $i$th largest eigenvalue in a large Erdos-Renyi graphs

Typical magnitude of $i$th largest eigenvalue of an Erdos-Renyi random graph seems to decay at least exponentially with $i$. Is there an analytic expression for the constant in the exponent, or a nice ...
Yaroslav Bulatov's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
119 views

Does exponential degree distribution entail Log-normal distance distribution in large complex graphs?

We've been exploring the graph structure of a large genealogical data base (WikiTree) of which main connected component contains about 23 million nodes. The graph edges are defined by any direct ...
Bernard Vatant's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
74 views

Cycle statistics of random endomorphism

Let $S$ be a set with $n$ elements and let $f:S\to S$ be a random function, chosen uniformly among the $n^n$ possibilities. Considering $f$ as a directed graph of constant outdegree $1$, i. e. with ...
Dominik's user avatar
  • 3,017
3 votes
1 answer
333 views

Probabilistic bound to the number of edge disjoint triangles in a random graph

Let $G$ be a random graph with $n$ vertices, and let $\delta(G)$ be the maximum number of triangles in $G$. Question. How to prove the bound $$P(\delta(G)) \leq m - t \sqrt{f(m)}) \leq 2e^{-t^2 / 4}$...
user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
566 views

Random graphs and Benjamini-Schramm convergence

I am looking for literature on the question whether a randomly chosen sequence of $k$-regular graphs converges in the Benjamini-Schramm sense to the universal covering with probability one. There are ...
user avatar
-1 votes
2 answers
419 views

How to define probability over graphs?

How can one formally define a random graph variable? If G is a random graph variable, then any finite graph is a realization of G. Formally a r.v maps the set of outcomes to a measurable space (may be ...
susheel's user avatar
23 votes
4 answers
978 views

What nodes of a graph should be vaccinated first?

Consider a graph, choose some "p: 0<p<1" (probability to infect the neighbor node). Choose some random number "K" of nodes which are "infected" initially. So we ...
Alexander Chervov's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
426 views

Random subgraph properties

Consider a graph $G$ of $N$ vertices and $M$ edges, and assume $G$ has typical complex network properties: it is not necessarily connected, but it has a high clustering coefficient and a giant ...
lenhhoxung's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
166 views

Reference request - random regular graphs vs random graphs w/ degree sequence

There are some properties that are easily studied for random d-regular graphs, but that are very hard to extend to random graphs with a given degree sequence (e.g. whether a graph is w.h.p. ...
DJA's user avatar
  • 435
6 votes
1 answer
421 views

Probability in Chromatic number upper bound of induced subgraph

Let $G=(V, E)$ be a graph with chromatic number $\chi(G)=1000 .$ Let $U \subset V$ be a random subset of $V$ chosen uniformly from among all $2^{|V|}$ subsets of $V$. Let $H=G[U]$ be the induced ...
Ever Garden's user avatar
-2 votes
1 answer
82 views

Ensemble averaging in a random graph (or network) in the large $N$ limit [closed]

I have a random graph/network described by the adjacency matrix $(a_{ij})_{N\times N}$ where $a_{ij}=1$ with probability $p$. Each node in the graph is associated with a continuous quantity $\eta_i=\...
maurizio's user avatar
  • 137
4 votes
1 answer
1k views

Critical probability for Erdos-Renyi digraphs to be strongly connected

Given $p \in [0,1]$, an Erdos-Renyi graph ${ER}(n,p)$ on $n$ vertices is constructed by defining, for each unordered couple of distinct vertices ${i,j}$ an edge between $i$ and $j$ with probability $p$...
math_lover'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
11 votes
1 answer
370 views

Graph with path of length $\geq n$ along grid diagonals - a known result in graph theory?

Is the following lemma a well known result in graph theory? I am studying a basic existence result that appears to be simple yet powerful. I have not seen it stated as an important result in graph ...
Claus's user avatar
  • 6,917
1 vote
0 answers
140 views

Count shortest path with different lengths in random graph

Let $G(n,p)$ be an Erdos-Renyi random graph on $n$ vertices with probability $p$, i.e. for each pair of vertices, they are connected directly by an undirected edge with probability $p$. Suppose we are ...
neverevernever's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
900 views

Asymptotically tight concentration of norms of subgaussian random vectors with independent coordinates, as the dimension $n \to \infty?$

Let $X=(X_1 \dots X_n)\in \mathbb{R}^n,$ be a subgaussian random vector so that $X_i$'s are independent, $\mathbb{E}X_i = 0, \mathbb{E}X_i^2=1.$ Before we pose our question, let's state the following: ...
Learning math's user avatar