135 research outputs found

    Random triangle removal

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    Starting from a complete graph on nn vertices, repeatedly delete the edges of a uniformly chosen triangle. This stochastic process terminates once it arrives at a triangle-free graph, and the fundamental question is to estimate the final number of edges (equivalently, the time it takes the process to finish, or how many edge-disjoint triangles are packed via the random greedy algorithm). Bollob\'as and Erd\H{o}s (1990) conjectured that the expected final number of edges has order n3/2n^{3/2}, motivated by the study of the Ramsey number R(3,t)R(3,t). An upper bound of o(n2)o(n^2) was shown by Spencer (1995) and independently by R\"odl and Thoma (1996). Several bounds were given for variants and generalizations (e.g., Alon, Kim and Spencer (1997) and Wormald (1999)), while the best known upper bound for the original question of Bollob\'as and Erd\H{o}s was n7/4+o(1)n^{7/4+o(1)} due to Grable (1997). No nontrivial lower bound was available. Here we prove that with high probability the final number of edges in random triangle removal is equal to n3/2+o(1)n^{3/2+o(1)}, thus confirming the 3/2 exponent conjectured by Bollob\'as and Erd\H{o}s and matching the predictions of Spencer et al. For the upper bound, for any fixed ϵ>0\epsilon>0 we construct a family of exp(O(1/ϵ))\exp(O(1/\epsilon)) graphs by gluing O(1/ϵ)O(1/\epsilon) triangles sequentially in a prescribed manner, and dynamically track all homomorphisms from them, rooted at any two vertices, up to the point where n3/2+ϵn^{3/2+\epsilon} edges remain. A system of martingales establishes concentration for these random variables around their analogous means in a random graph with corresponding edge density, and a key role is played by the self-correcting nature of the process. The lower bound builds on the estimates at that very point to show that the process will typically terminate with at least n3/2o(1)n^{3/2-o(1)} edges left.Comment: 42 pages, 4 figures. Supercedes arXiv:1108.178

    Explicit expanders with cutoff phenomena

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    The cutoff phenomenon describes a sharp transition in the convergence of an ergodic finite Markov chain to equilibrium. Of particular interest is understanding this convergence for the simple random walk on a bounded-degree expander graph. The first example of a family of bounded-degree graphs where the random walk exhibits cutoff in total-variation was provided only very recently, when the authors showed this for a typical random regular graph. However, no example was known for an explicit (deterministic) family of expanders with this phenomenon. Here we construct a family of cubic expanders where the random walk from a worst case initial position exhibits total-variation cutoff. Variants of this construction give cubic expanders without cutoff, as well as cubic graphs with cutoff at any prescribed time-point.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figure
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