Dice Question Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

Distinguish tree vs cyclic diagrams at the √n scale

Ascertain whether tree-shaped diagram contributions of size at least √n remain asymptotically distinguishable from cyclic diagram contributions in the dense Wigner matrix setting considered, specifically clarifying if tree diagrams of size ≥ √n differ significantly from cyclic diagrams in magnitude or effect on the algorithmic state.

Information Square Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

Background

In analyzing the extension of the tree approximation to larger iteration counts, the authors argue that at T ≈ √n the contributions from tree diagrams become exponentially small while the number of non-tree (cyclic) diagrams grows rapidly. Conceptually, random walks of length ≳ √n in an n-vertex graph are likely to collide, potentially blurring the distinction between trees and cycles.

This raises a fundamental uncertainty about the diagrammatic separation at the √n scale, which directly impacts whether tree-based asymptotics can be sustained beyond this regime.

References

When T\approx \sqrt n, the tree diagrams with T vertices are exponentially small in magnitude (see \cref{lem:variance}) and the number of non-tree diagrams starts to become overwhelmingly large. At the conceptual level, random walks of length~\sgt \sqrt{n} in an $n$-vertex graph are likely to collide. Therefore, it is unclear whether or not the tree diagrams of size~\sgt \sqrt{n} are significantly different from diagrams with cycles.

Fourier Analysis of Iterative Algorithms (2404.07881 - Jones et al., 11 Apr 2024) in Section 6.1 (Combinatorial phase transitions)