2,221 research outputs found
On a problem of Erd\H{o}s and Rothschild on edges in triangles
Erd\H{o}s and Rothschild asked to estimate the maximum number, denoted by
H(N,C), such that every N-vertex graph with at least CN^2 edges, each of which
is contained in at least one triangle, must contain an edge that is in at least
H(N,C) triangles. In particular, Erd\H{o}s asked in 1987 to determine whether
for every C>0 there is \epsilon >0 such that H(N,C) > N^\epsilon, for all
sufficiently large N. We prove that H(N,C) = N^{O(1/log log N)} for every fixed
C < 1/4. This gives a negative answer to the question of Erd\H{o}s, and is best
possible in terms of the range for C, as it is known that every N-vertex graph
with more than (N^2)/4 edges contains an edge that is in at least N/6
triangles.Comment: 8 page
Remarks on the derivation of Gross-Pitaevskii equation with magnetic Laplacian
The effective dynamics for a Bose-Einstein condensate in the regime of high
dilution and subject to an external magnetic field is governed by a magnetic
Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We elucidate the steps needed to adapt to the
magnetic case the proof of the derivation of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation
within the "projection counting" scheme
Maximum hitting for n sufficiently large
For a left-compressed intersecting family \A contained in [n]^(r) and a set X
contained in [n], let \A(X) = {A in \A : A intersect X is non-empty}. Borg
asked: for which X is |\A(X)| maximised by taking \A to be all r-sets
containing the element 1? We determine exactly which X have this property, for
n sufficiently large depending on r.Comment: Version 2 corrects the calculation of the sizes of the set families
appearing in the proof of the main theorem. It also incorporates a number of
other smaller corrections and improvements suggested by the anonymous
referees. 7 page
Strong polarized relations for the continuum
We prove that the strong polarized relation for the continuum holds for
and for every supercompact cardinal. We use iteration of Mathias
forcing.Comment: 9 page
Soft random solids and their heterogeneous elasticity
Spatial heterogeneity in the elastic properties of soft random solids is
examined via vulcanization theory. The spatial heterogeneity in the
\emph{structure} of soft random solids is a result of the fluctuations
locked-in at their synthesis, which also brings heterogeneity in their
\emph{elastic properties}. Vulcanization theory studies semi-microscopic models
of random-solid-forming systems, and applies replica field theory to deal with
their quenched disorder and thermal fluctuations. The elastic deformations of
soft random solids are argued to be described by the Goldstone sector of
fluctuations contained in vulcanization theory, associated with a subtle form
of spontaneous symmetry breaking that is associated with the
liquid-to-random-solid transition. The resulting free energy of this Goldstone
sector can be reinterpreted as arising from a phenomenological description of
an elastic medium with quenched disorder. Through this comparison, we arrive at
the statistics of the quenched disorder of the elasticity of soft random
solids, in terms of residual stress and Lam\'e-coefficient fields. In
particular, there are large residual stresses in the equilibrium reference
state, and the disorder correlators involving the residual stress are found to
be long-ranged and governed by a universal parameter that also gives the mean
shear modulus.Comment: 40 pages, 7 figure
The irrationality of a number theoretical series
Denote by the sum of the -th powers of the divisors of ,
and let . We prove that Schinzel's
conjecture H implies that is irrational, and give an unconditional proof
for the case
Spectral Statistics of Erd{\H o}s-R\'enyi Graphs II: Eigenvalue Spacing and the Extreme Eigenvalues
We consider the ensemble of adjacency matrices of Erd{\H o}s-R\'enyi random
graphs, i.e.\ graphs on vertices where every edge is chosen independently
and with probability . We rescale the matrix so that its bulk
eigenvalues are of order one. Under the assumption , we prove
the universality of eigenvalue distributions both in the bulk and at the edge
of the spectrum. More precisely, we prove (1) that the eigenvalue spacing of
the Erd{\H o}s-R\'enyi graph in the bulk of the spectrum has the same
distribution as that of the Gaussian orthogonal ensemble; and (2) that the
second largest eigenvalue of the Erd{\H o}s-R\'enyi graph has the same
distribution as the largest eigenvalue of the Gaussian orthogonal ensemble. As
an application of our method, we prove the bulk universality of generalized
Wigner matrices under the assumption that the matrix entries have at least moments
Random graphs containing arbitrary distributions of subgraphs
Traditional random graph models of networks generate networks that are
locally tree-like, meaning that all local neighborhoods take the form of trees.
In this respect such models are highly unrealistic, most real networks having
strongly non-tree-like neighborhoods that contain short loops, cliques, or
other biconnected subgraphs. In this paper we propose and analyze a new class
of random graph models that incorporates general subgraphs, allowing for
non-tree-like neighborhoods while still remaining solvable for many fundamental
network properties. Among other things we give solutions for the size of the
giant component, the position of the phase transition at which the giant
component appears, and percolation properties for both site and bond
percolation on networks generated by the model.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
Relaxation dynamics of maximally clustered networks
We study the relaxation dynamics of fully clustered networks (maximal number
of triangles) to an unclustered state under two different edge dynamics---the
double-edge swap, corresponding to degree-preserving randomization of the
configuration model, and single edge replacement, corresponding to full
randomization of the Erd\H{o}s--R\'enyi random graph. We derive expressions for
the time evolution of the degree distribution, edge multiplicity distribution
and clustering coefficient. We show that under both dynamics networks undergo a
continuous phase transition in which a giant connected component is formed. We
calculate the position of the phase transition analytically using the
Erd\H{o}s--R\'enyi phenomenology
Growth of graph states in quantum networks
We propose a scheme to distribute graph states over quantum networks in the
presence of noise in the channels and in the operations. The protocol can be
implemented efficiently for large graph sates of arbitrary (complex) topology.
We benchmark our scheme with two protocols where each connected component is
prepared in a node belonging to the component and subsequently distributed via
quantum repeaters to the remaining connected nodes. We show that the fidelity
of the generated graphs can be written as the partition function of a classical
Ising-type Hamiltonian. We give exact expressions of the fidelity of the linear
cluster and results for its decay rate in random graphs with arbitrary
(uncorrelated) degree distributions.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
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