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probabilistic combinatorics

Embedding spanning bounded degree graphs in randomly perturbed graphs

arXiv:1802.04603

summary

The paper develops an absorption-based method for embedding spanning bounded-degree graphs and powers of Hamilton cycles into randomly perturbed dense graphs, showing that these embeddings occur at lower edge-probability thresholds than in pure random graphs.

Abstract

We study the model $G_α\cup G(n,p)$ of randomly perturbed dense graphs, where $G_α$ is any $n$-vertex graph with minimum degree at least $αn$ and $G(n,p)$ is the binomial random graph. We introduce a general approach for studying the appearance of spanning subgraphs in this model using absorption. This approach yields simpler proofs of several known results. We also use it to derive the following two new results. For every $α>0$ and $Δ\ge 5$, and every $n$-vertex graph $F$ with maximum degree at most $Δ$, we show that if $p=ω(n^{-2/(Δ+1)})$ then $G_α\cup G(n,p)$ with high probability contains a copy of $F$. The bound used for $p$ here is lower by a $\log$-factor in comparison to the conjectured threshold for the general appearance of such subgraphs in $G(n,p)$ alone, a typical feature of previous results concerning randomly perturbed dense graphs. We also give the first example of graphs where the appearance threshold in $G_α\cup G(n,p)$ is lower than the appearance threshold in $G(n,p)$ by substantially more than a $\log$-factor. We prove that, for every $k\geq 2$ and $α>0$, there is some $η>0$ for which the $k$th power of a Hamilton cycle with high probability appears in $G_α\cup G(n,p)$ when $p=ω(n^{-1/k-η})$. The appearance threshold of the $k$th power of a Hamilton cycle in $G(n,p)$ alone is known to be $n^{-1/k}$, up to a $\log$-term when $k=2$, and exactly for $k>2$.

25 pages; accepted for publication in Mathematika

Topics & keywords

#randomly perturbed graphs#spanning subgraph embedding#bounded degree graphs#Hamilton cycle powers#absorption methodG_alphaG(n,p)absorption techniquethresholdminimum degreek-th power Hamilton cycle