Subcritical random hypergraphs, high-order components, and hypertrees
Oliver Cooley, Wenjie Fang, Nicola Del Giudice, Mihyun Kang

TL;DR
This paper extends the understanding of phase transitions in random hypergraphs by analyzing the structure and size of high-order components in the subcritical regime, using probabilistic and enumerative methods.
Contribution
It characterizes the structure and size of the largest high-order components in subcritical random hypergraphs, introducing hypertrees and related objects for analysis.
Findings
Largest $j$-connected components are characterized in the subcritical regime.
The structure and size of these components are determined using hypertrees.
The study establishes a symmetry between subcritical hypergraphs and hypergraphs after removing giant components.
Abstract
In the binomial random graph , when changes from (subcritical case) to and then to (supercritical case) for , with high probability the order of the largest component increases smoothly from to and then to . As a natural generalisation of random graphs and connectedness, we consider the binomial random -uniform hypergraph (where each -tuple of vertices is present as a hyperedge with probability independently) and the following notion of high-order connectedness. Given an integer , two sets of vertices are called \emph{-connected} if there is a walk of hyperedges between them such that any two consecutive hyperedges intersect in at least vertices. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStochastic processes and statistical mechanics · Topological and Geometric Data Analysis · Limits and Structures in Graph Theory
