The random k-matching-free process
Michael Krivelevich, Matthew Kwan, Po-Shen Loh, Benny Sudakov

TL;DR
This paper analyzes a random graph process that adds edges while avoiding large matchings, showing it typically reaches maximum edge count under certain conditions and exploring its behavior across different regimes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the k-matching-free process, identifying conditions for maximum edge accumulation and exploring intermediate regimes.
Findings
Process likely terminates with maximum edges for certain k ranges
Bounds on k are essentially tight
Initial exploration of intermediate k regimes
Abstract
Let be a graph property which is preserved by removal of edges, and consider the random graph process that starts with the empty -vertex graph and then adds edges one-by-one, each chosen uniformly at random subject to the constraint that is not violated. These types of random processes have been the subject of extensive research over the last 20 years, having striking applications in extremal combinatorics, and leading to the discovery of important probabilistic tools. In this paper we consider the -matching-free process, where is the property of not containing a matching of size . We are able to analyse the behaviour of this process for a wide range of values of ; in particular we prove that if or if then this process is likely to terminate in a -matching-free graph with the maximum possible…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLimits and Structures in Graph Theory · Markov Chains and Monte Carlo Methods · Stochastic processes and statistical mechanics
