Phase transitions for contact processes on one-dimensional networks
Benedikt Jahnel, Lukas L\"uchtrath, Christian M\"onch

TL;DR
This paper investigates the phase transition between survival and extinction in contact processes on one-dimensional random networks with quenched disorder, providing conditions for non-trivial phase transitions and applying results to various spatial graph models.
Contribution
It establishes sufficient conditions for the existence of a subcritical phase in contact processes on one-dimensional networks with disorder, extending previous results to scale-free random geometric graphs.
Findings
Non-trivial phase transition occurs if and only if the graph is locally finite.
Phase transition exists for Bernoulli long-range percolation when decay exponent > 2.
Results suggest similar behavior in higher dimensions with finite degree moments.
Abstract
We study the survival/extinction phase transition for contact processes with quenched disorder. The disorder is given by a locally finite random graph with vertices indexed by the integers that is assumed to be invariant under index shifts and augments the nearest-neighbour lattice by additional long-range edges. We provide sufficient conditions that imply the existence of a subcritical phase and therefore the non-triviality of the phase transition. Our results apply to instances of scale-free random geometric graphs with any integrable degree distribution. The present work complements previously developed techniques to establish the existence of a subcritical phase on Poisson--Gilbert graphs and Poisson--Delaunay triangulations (M\'enard et al., Ann. Sci. \'Ec. Norm. Sup\'er., 2016), on Galton--Watson trees (Bhamidi et al., Ann. Probab., 2021) and on locally tree-like random graphs…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions · Topological and Geometric Data Analysis
