How does the chromatic number of a random graph vary?
Annika Heckel, Oliver Riordan

TL;DR
This paper investigates the variability of the chromatic number in random graphs, establishing new lower bounds on its distribution width and proposing conjectures about its true behavior and limiting distribution.
Contribution
It provides significantly improved lower bounds on the chromatic number's distribution width and formulates detailed conjectures on its true variability and Gaussian limiting distribution.
Findings
Lower bound of at least n^{1/2 - o(1)} on the width for some n
Conditional lower bound of order sqrt(n) log log n / log^3 n
Conjecture that the true width matches the lower bound up to a constant
Abstract
How does the chromatic number of a graph chosen uniformly at random from all graphs on vertices behave? This quantity is a random variable, so one can ask (i) for upper and lower bounds on its typical values, and (ii) for bounds on how much it varies: what is the width (e.g., standard deviation) of its distribution? On (i) there has been considerable progress over the last 45 years; on (ii), which is our focus here, remarkably little. One would like both upper and lower bounds on the width of the distribution, and ideally a description of the (appropriately scaled) limiting distribution. There is a well known upper bound of Shamir and Spencer of order , improved slightly by Alon to , but no non-trivial lower bound was known until 2019, when the first author proved that the width is at least for infinitely many , answering a longstanding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLimits and Structures in Graph Theory · Nanocluster Synthesis and Applications · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs
