Mean curvature, threshold dynamics, and phase field theory on finite graphs
Yves van Gennip, Nestor Guillen, Braxton Osting, Andrea L. Bertozzi

TL;DR
This paper introduces and analyzes graph analogues of mean curvature flow, threshold dynamics, and phase field models, establishing theoretical connections, deriving a new graph curvature, and proving convergence and stability results.
Contribution
It defines a novel graph curvature based on the graph cut function, connects graph processes to their continuum counterparts, and proves convergence and stability results for graph MBO and AC schemes.
Findings
Graph curvature derived from the graph cut function differs from previous discretizations.
Dynamics are trivial for small parameters, demonstrating 'freezing' or 'pinning' phenomena.
Graph MBO scheme converges to a stationary state in finite iterations.
Abstract
In the continuum, close connections exist between mean curvature flow, the Allen-Cahn (AC) partial differential equation, and the Merriman-Bence-Osher (MBO) threshold dynamics scheme. Graph analogues of these processes have recently seen a rise in popularity as relaxations of NP-complete combinatorial problems, which demands deeper theoretical underpinnings of the graph processes. The aim of this paper is to introduce these graph processes in the light of their continuum counterparts, provide some background, prove the first results connecting them, illustrate these processes with examples and identify open questions for future study. We derive a graph curvature from the graph cut function, the natural graph counterpart of total variation (perimeter). This derivation and the resulting curvature definition differ from those in earlier literature, where the continuum mean curvature is…
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