Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Explosion in weighted Hyperbolic Random Graphs and Geometric Inhomogeneous Random Graphs

Published 13 Mar 2018 in math.PR | (1803.04897v3)

Abstract: In this paper we study weighted distances in scale-free spatial network models: hyperbolic random graphs (HRG), geometric inhomogeneous random graphs (GIRG) and scale-free percolation (SFP). In HRGs, $n=\Theta(\mathrm{e}{R/2})$ vertices are sampled independently from the hyperbolic disk with radius $R$ and two vertices are connected either when they are within hyperbolic distance $R$, or independently with a probability depending on the hyperbolic distance. In GIRGs and SFP, each vertex is given an independent weight and location from an underlying measured metric space and $\mathbb{Z}d$, respectively, and two vertices are connected independently with a probability that is a function of their distance and weights. We assign i.i.d. weights to the edges of the random graphs and study the weighted distance between two uniformly chosen vertices. In SFP, we study the weighted distance from the origin of vertex-sequences with norm tending to infinity. In particular, we study the case when the parameters are so that the degree distribution in the graph follows a power law with exponent $\tau\in(2,3)$ (infinite variance), and the edge-weight distribution is such that it produces an explosive age-dependent branching process with power-law offspring distribution. We show that in all three models, typical distances within the giant/infinite component converge in distribution, solving an open question in [Explosion and distances in scale-free percolation (2017)]. The main tools of our proof are to couple the models to infinite versions, to follow the shortest paths to infinity and to connect these paths using weight-dependent percolation on the graphs: delete edges attached to vertices with higher weight with higher probability. We realise this using the edge-weights: only short edges connected to high weight vertices will stay, yielding arbitrarily short upper bounds for the connections.

Citations (36)

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.

Tweets

Sign up for free to view the 1 tweet with 0 likes about this paper.