Bootstrap percolation on Galton-Watson trees
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1. | Title | Title of document | Bootstrap percolation on Galton-Watson trees |
2. | Creator | Author's name, affiliation, country | Béla Bollobás; University of Cambridge, University of Memphis, and London Institute for Mathematical Sciences.; United Kingdom |
2. | Creator | Author's name, affiliation, country | Karen Gunderson; University of Bristol; United Kingdom |
2. | Creator | Author's name, affiliation, country | Cecilia Holmgren; Stockholm University and University of Cambridge; Sweden |
2. | Creator | Author's name, affiliation, country | Svante Janson; Uppsala University; Sweden |
2. | Creator | Author's name, affiliation, country | Michał Przykucki; University of Cambridge and London Institute for Mathematical Sciences; United Kingdom |
3. | Subject | Discipline(s) | |
3. | Subject | Keyword(s) | bootstrap percolation; branching number; infinite trees; Galton--Watson trees |
3. | Subject | Subject classification | 05C05; 60K35; 60C05; 60J80; 05C80 |
4. | Description | Abstract | Bootstrap percolation is a type of cellular automaton which has been used to model various physical phenomena, such as ferromagnetism. For each natural number $r$, the $r$-neighbour bootstrap process is an update rule for vertices of a graph in one of two states: `infected' or `healthy'. In consecutive rounds, each healthy vertex with at least $r$ infected neighbours becomes itself infected. Percolation is said to occur if every vertex is eventually infected. Usually, the starting set of infected vertices is chosen at random, with all vertices initially infected independently with probability $p$. In that case, given a graph $G$ and infection threshold $r$, a quantity of interest is the critical probability, $p_c(G,r)$, at which percolation becomes likely to occur. In this paper, we look at infinite trees and, answering a problem posed by Balogh, Peres and Pete, we show that for any $b \geq r$ and for any $\epsilon > 0$ there exists a tree $T$ with branching number $\operatorname{br}(T) = b$ and critical probability $p_c(T,r) < \epsilon$. However, this is false if we limit ourselves to the well studied family of Galton--Watson trees. We show that for every $r \geq 2$ there exists a constant $c_r>0$ such that if $T$ is a Galton- Watson tree with branching number $\operatorname{br}(T) = b \geq r$ then $$p_c(T,r) > \frac{c_r}{b} e^{-\frac{b}{r-1}}.$$ We also show that this bound is sharp up to a factor of $O(b)$ by giving an explicit family of Galton--Watson trees with critical probability bounded from above by $C_r e^{-\frac{b}{r-1}}$ for some constant $C_r>0$. |
5. | Publisher | Organizing agency, location | |
6. | Contributor | Sponsor(s) | NSF grant DMS 1301614, EU project MULTIPLEX no. 317532, Swedish Research Council, Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation |
7. | Date | (YYYY-MM-DD) | 2014-01-19 |
8. | Type | Status & genre | Peer-reviewed Article |
8. | Type | Type | |
9. | Format | File format | |
10. | Identifier | Uniform Resource Identifier | http://ejp.ejpecp.org/article/view/2758 |
10. | Identifier | Digital Object Identifier | 10.1214/EJP.v19-2758 |
11. | Source | Journal/conference title; vol., no. (year) | Electronic Journal of Probability; Vol 19 |
12. | Language | English=en | en |
14. | Coverage | Geo-spatial location, chronological period, research sample (gender, age, etc.) | |
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