Premium
Cycle Factors and Renewal Theory
Author(s) -
Kahn Jeff,
Lubetzky Eyal,
Wormald Nicholas
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
communications on pure and applied mathematics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.12
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1097-0312
pISSN - 0010-3640
DOI - 10.1002/cpa.21613
Subject(s) - mathematics , combinatorics , conjecture , integer (computer science) , permutation (music) , vertex (graph theory) , disjoint sets , embedding , graph , discrete mathematics , physics , artificial intelligence , computer science , acoustics , programming language
For which values of k does a uniformly chosen 3‐regular graph G on n vertices typically contain n/k vertex‐disjoint k ‐cycles (a k ‐cycle factor)? To date, this has been answered for k = n and for k ≪ log n ; the former, the Hamiltonicity problem, was finally answered in the affirmative by Robinson and Wormald in 1992, while the answer in the latter case is negative since with high probability (w.h.p.) most vertices do not lie on k ‐cycles. A major role in our study of this problem is played by renewal processes without replacement, where one wishes to estimate the probability that in a uniform permutation of a given set of positive integers, the partial sums hit a designated target integer. Using sharp tail estimates for these renewal processes, which may be of independent interest, we settle the cycle factor problem completely: the “threshold” for a k ‐cycle factor in G as above is κ 0 log 2 n withκ 0 = [ 1 − 1 2log 2 3 ] − 1 ≈ 4.82 . To be precise, G contains a k ‐cycle factor w.h.p. if k ≥ K 0 ( n ) : = ⌈ κ 0log 2 ( 2 n / e ) ⌉ and w.h.p. does not contain one if k < K 0 ( n ) − log 2 n / n . Thus, for most values of n the threshold concentrates on the single integer K 0 ( n ). As a byproduct, we confirm the “comb conjecture,” an old problem concerning the embedding of certain spanning trees in the random graph G ( n,p ).© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.