Core congestion is inherent in hyperbolic networks
Victor Chepoi, Feodor F. Dragan, and Yann Vax\`es

TL;DR
This paper proves that hyperbolic networks inherently have a core that intercepts a significant portion of traffic flow, confirming conjectures and extending understanding of congestion in such networks.
Contribution
It establishes that every hyperbolic network admits a core intercepting half of the flow, and clarifies the location of this core relative to the network's median, addressing prior conjectures.
Findings
Hyperbolic networks have a core intercepting at least half of the total flow.
The core is located near the median in the injective hull, not the center of mass.
Bounds are provided for multi-core sizes in non-uniform traffic scenarios.
Abstract
We investigate the impact the negative curvature has on the traffic congestion in large-scale networks. We prove that every Gromov hyperbolic network admits a core, thus answering in the positive a conjecture by Jonckheere, Lou, Bonahon, and Baryshnikov, Internet Mathematics, 7 (2011) which is based on the experimental observation by Narayan and Saniee, Physical Review E, 84 (2011) that real-world networks with small hyperbolicity have a core congestion. Namely, we prove that for every subset of vertices of a -hyperbolic graph there exists a vertex of such that the disk of radius centered at intercepts at least one half of the total flow between all pairs of vertices of , where the flow between two vertices is carried by geodesic (or quasi-geodesic) -paths. A set intercepts the flow between two nodes …
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeometric and Algebraic Topology · Slime Mold and Myxomycetes Research · Interconnection Networks and Systems
