On Topological Minors in Random Simplicial Complexes
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For random graphs, the containment problem considers the probability that a binomial random graph $G(n,p)$ contains a given graph as a substructure. When asking for the graph as a topological minor, i.e., for a copy of a subdivision of the given graph, it is well-known that the (sharp) threshold is at $p=1/n$. We consider a natural analogue of this question for higher-dimensional random complexes $X^k(n,p)$, first studied by Cohen, Costa, Farber and Kappeler for $k=2$. Improving previous results, we show that $p=\Theta(1/\sqrt{n})$ is the (coarse) threshold for containing a subdivision of any fixed complete $2$-complex. For higher dimensions $k>2$, we get that $p=O(n^{-1/k})$ is an upper bound for the threshold probability of containing a subdivision of a fixed $k$-dimensional complex.
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