4,038 research outputs found

    Exchangeable pairs, switchings, and random regular graphs

    Full text link
    We consider the distribution of cycle counts in a random regular graph, which is closely linked to the graph's spectral properties. We broaden the asymptotic regime in which the cycle counts are known to be approximately Poisson, and we give an explicit bound in total variation distance for the approximation. Using this result, we calculate limiting distributions of linear eigenvalue functionals for random regular graphs. Previous results on the distribution of cycle counts by McKay, Wormald, and Wysocka (2004) used the method of switchings, a combinatorial technique for asymptotic enumeration. Our proof uses Stein's method of exchangeable pairs and demonstrates an interesting connection between the two techniques.Comment: Very minor changes; 23 page

    Cycles and eigenvalues of sequentially growing random regular graphs

    Full text link
    Consider the sum of dd many i.i.d. random permutation matrices on nn labels along with their transposes. The resulting matrix is the adjacency matrix of a random regular (multi)-graph of degree 2d2d on nn vertices. It is known that the distribution of smooth linear eigenvalue statistics of this matrix is given asymptotically by sums of Poisson random variables. This is in contrast with Gaussian fluctuation of similar quantities in the case of Wigner matrices. It is also known that for Wigner matrices the joint fluctuation of linear eigenvalue statistics across minors of growing sizes can be expressed in terms of the Gaussian Free Field (GFF). In this article, we explore joint asymptotic (in nn) fluctuation for a coupling of all random regular graphs of various degrees obtained by growing each component permutation according to the Chinese Restaurant Process. Our primary result is that the corresponding eigenvalue statistics can be expressed in terms of a family of independent Yule processes with immigration. These processes track the evolution of short cycles in the graph. If we now take dd to infinity, certain GFF-like properties emerge.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/13-AOP864 the Annals of Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Quantitative Small Subgraph Conditioning

    Full text link
    We revisit the method of small subgraph conditioning, used to establish that random regular graphs are Hamiltonian a.a.s. We refine this method using new technical machinery for random dd-regular graphs on nn vertices that hold not just asymptotically, but for any values of dd and nn. This lets us estimate how quickly the probability of containing a Hamiltonian cycle converges to 1, and it produces quantitative contiguity results between different models of random regular graphs. These results hold with dd held fixed or growing to infinity with nn. As additional applications, we establish the distributional convergence of the number of Hamiltonian cycles when dd grows slowly to infinity, and we prove that the number of Hamiltonian cycles can be approximately computed from the graph's eigenvalues for almost all regular graphs.Comment: 59 pages, 5 figures; minor changes for clarit

    On Universal Cycles for Multisets

    Get PDF
    A Universal Cycle for t-multisets of [n]={1,...,n} is a cyclic sequence of (n+tβˆ’1t)\binom{n+t-1}{t} integers from [n] with the property that each t-multiset of [n] appears exactly once consecutively in the sequence. For such a sequence to exist it is necessary that n divides (n+tβˆ’1t)\binom{n+t-1}{t}, and it is reasonable to conjecture that this condition is sufficient for large enough n in terms of t. We prove the conjecture completely for t in {2,3} and partially for t in {4,6}. These results also support a positive answer to a question of Knuth.Comment: 14 pages, two figures, will appear in Discrete Mathematics' special issue on de Bruijn Cycles, Gray Codes and their generalizations; paper revised according to journal referees' suggestion
    • …
    corecore