Show simple item record

Extremal and probabilistic bootstrap percolation

dc.contributorBollobás, Béla
dc.creatorPrzykucki, Michał Jan
dc.date.accessioned2018-11-24T23:26:14Z
dc.date.available2014-07-01T15:41:50Z
dc.date.available2018-11-24T23:26:14Z
dc.date.issued2013-11-12
dc.identifierhttps://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/245349
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.aust.edu.ng/xmlui/handle/123456789/3791
dc.description.abstractIn this dissertation we consider several extremal and probabilistic problems in bootstrap percolation on various families of graphs, including grids, hypercubes and trees. Bootstrap percolation is one of the simplest cellular automata. The most widely studied model is the so-called r-neighbour bootstrap percolation, in which we consider the spread of infection on a graph G according to the following deterministic rule: infected vertices of G remain infected forever and in successive rounds healthy vertices with at least r already infected neighbours become infected. Percolation is said to occur if eventually every vertex is infected. In Chapter 1 we consider a particular extremal problem in 2-neighbour bootstrap percolation on the n \times n square grid. We show that the maximum time an infection process started from an initially infected set of size n can take to infect the entire vertex set is equal to the integer nearest to (5n^2-2n)/8. In Chapter 2 we relax the condition on the size of the initially infected sets and show that the maximum time for sets of arbitrary size is 13n^2/18+O(n). In Chapter 3 we consider a similar problem, namely the maximum percolation time for 2-neighbour bootstrap percolation on the hypercube. We give an exact answer to this question showing that this time is \lfloor n^2/3 \rfloor. In Chapter 4 we consider the following probabilistic problem in bootstrap percolation: let T be an infinite tree with branching number \br(T) = b. Initially, infect every vertex of T independently with probability p > 0. Given r, define the critical probability, p_c(T,r), to be the value of p at which percolation becomes likely to occur. Answering a problem posed by Balogh, Peres and Pete, we show that if b \geq r then the value of b itself does not yield any non-trivial lower bound on p_c(T,r). In other words, for any \varepsilon > 0 there exists a tree T with branching number \br(T) = b and critical probability p_c(T,r) < \varepsilon. However, in Chapter 5 we prove that 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 \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 describing 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.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherUniversity of Cambridge
dc.publisherDepartment of Pure Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics
dc.subjectBootstrap percolation
dc.subjectProbabilistic combinatorics
dc.subjectExtremal combinatorics
dc.titleExtremal and probabilistic bootstrap percolation
dc.typeThesis


Files in this item

FilesSizeFormatView
thesis.pdf1.080Mbapplication/pdfView/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record