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arxiv: 2601.03622 · v2 · pith:VKTJV65Enew · submitted 2026-01-07 · 🧮 math-ph · math.MP

Entropic Collapse and Extreme First-Passage Times in Discrete Ballistic Transport

Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 17:11 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math-ph math.MP
keywords extreme first-passage timeshierarchical networksentropic collapserandom walkersdiscrete distributionsinjection-limited transportComet graphBethe lattice
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The pith

On hierarchical networks, minimum arrival times of many walkers follow a discrete distribution with a strict lower bound set by the graph, rather than any classical extreme-value law.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper studies the earliest arrival time among N non-interacting random walkers moving on discrete hierarchical networks. It separates two regimes: injection-limited transport, where escape from the starting sites dominates, and bulk-limited transport, where the extended structure controls progress. In the injection-limited case the distribution of the minimum arrival time is discrete and bounded from below by a time fixed by the network hierarchy; it does not converge to any generalized extreme-value distribution. The authors derive the asymptotic form of this bounded distribution and show that it collapses when the geometry permits an exponentially growing number of long paths. They introduce a geometry-encoding function that diagnoses whether a given graph belongs to the hierarchical class where the bound survives.

Core claim

In injection-limited transport on discrete hierarchical networks the minimum arrival time among N walkers obeys a discrete distribution possessing a strict lower bound fixed by the network's branching structure; this distribution does not converge to any member of the classical generalized extreme-value family, and the scaling is erased by entropic collapse whenever the phase space of delayed paths diverges with distance, as occurs on the Bethe lattice.

What carries the argument

entropic collapse: the divergence of the number of long, low-probability paths that erases the strict lower time bound once the geometry ceases to be source-trap dominated

If this is right

  • The earliest arrival time remains bounded below by a network-dependent constant even for arbitrarily large walker numbers.
  • The geometry-encoding function returns a binary diagnostic that identifies hierarchical graphs without enumerating all paths.
  • In bulk-dominated geometries the lower bound disappears and the distribution recovers conventional extreme-value scaling.
  • The analytic asymptotic form matches direct simulations on the Comet graph but fails on the Bethe lattice.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same lower-bound mechanism may appear in any discrete transport process whose allowed paths form a finite-depth hierarchy.
  • Controlling the injection-limited regime could be used to enforce hard deadlines in engineered networks.
  • The geometry-encoding function offers a practical test for whether a real-world contact network will exhibit bounded extreme passage times.

Load-bearing premise

The networks are discrete and hierarchical, the walkers do not interact, and transport can be cleanly partitioned into injection-limited versus bulk-limited regimes.

What would settle it

Monte Carlo runs on the same hierarchical graph that produce a minimum-arrival distribution converging to a Gumbel or Weibull law as N grows would falsify the claim.

read the original abstract

We investigate the extreme first-passage statistics of $N$ non-interacting random walkers on discrete, hierarchical networks. {By distinguishing between transport limited by escape from localized initial states (injection-limited) and transport limited by the extended network (bulk-limited), we identify a class of extreme value statistics that arises in geometries dominated by source traps (e.g., the Comet graph).} In this regime, the distribution of the minimum arrival time does not converge to any of the classical generalized extreme value distributions. Instead, it follows a discrete distribution with a {strict lower time bound} determined by the properties of the hierarchical network. We analytically derive the asymptotic behavior of this class and validate our predictions against Monte Carlo simulations. Crucially, we identify the mechanism of ``entropic collapse" that destroys this scaling in bulk-dominated geometries like the Bethe lattice, where the phase space of delayed paths diverges with distance. This work establishes a geometry-encoding function that acts as a diagnostic tool for ascertaining whether or not a given graph is hierarchical.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 3 minor

Summary. The manuscript investigates extreme first-passage statistics of N non-interacting random walkers on discrete hierarchical networks. By distinguishing injection-limited regimes (e.g., Comet graph) dominated by source traps from bulk-limited regimes (e.g., Bethe lattice), it claims that the minimum arrival time follows a discrete distribution with a strict lower bound that does not converge to any classical generalized extreme value distribution; analytic asymptotics are derived via master equations, Monte Carlo simulations validate the lower-bound mass and scaling, entropic collapse is identified as the mechanism destroying the scaling in bulk geometries, and a geometry-encoding function is introduced as a diagnostic for hierarchical graphs.

Significance. If the central claims hold, the work establishes a new class of extreme-value statistics arising specifically from discrete source-trap geometries, supplies explicit master-equation derivations together with reproducible Monte Carlo checks, and provides a geometry-encoding diagnostic. These elements could inform transport modeling in complex networks across physics and related fields.

minor comments (3)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract introduces 'entropic collapse' without a one-sentence definition; a brief parenthetical clarification would improve immediate readability.
  2. [Section introducing the geometry-encoding function] The geometry-encoding function is described as a diagnostic but lacks an explicit formula or algorithmic pseudocode in the main text; adding this would aid reproducibility.
  3. [Figures and captions] Figure captions for the Monte Carlo comparisons should explicitly state the number of realizations and the precise network sizes used to allow direct replication.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading of the manuscript and for the positive assessment of its potential contribution to extreme-value statistics in discrete networks. We appreciate the recommendation for minor revision. No specific major comments were provided in the report, so we have no points requiring direct rebuttal or revision at this time. We remain available to address any additional questions or clarifications the referee may wish to raise.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained

full rationale

The paper derives the minimum arrival time distribution analytically from master equations on explicitly defined hierarchical graphs (Comet graph for injection-limited regime, Bethe lattice for bulk-limited). The strict lower time bound follows directly from the discrete geometry and non-interacting walker rules without being fitted or self-referential. Entropic collapse is identified as a phase-space divergence in the bulk regime, again from the graph structure. Monte Carlo simulations are presented as external validation reproducing the predicted mass at the lower bound and scaling, not as input to the derivation. No self-citations are invoked for uniqueness theorems or ansatzes, and no quantity is defined in terms of the target result.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 2 invented entities

The central claim rests on the distinction between injection-limited and bulk-limited regimes plus the existence of a strict lower time bound fixed by hierarchical network properties; entropic collapse is introduced as the mechanism that eliminates the scaling when phase space diverges.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Walkers are non-interacting and move on discrete hierarchical networks
    Stated in the abstract as the setup for distinguishing transport regimes
invented entities (2)
  • entropic collapse no independent evidence
    purpose: Mechanism that destroys the discrete scaling in bulk-dominated geometries by divergence of delayed-path phase space
    Identified as the reason the asymptotic behavior fails on the Bethe lattice
  • geometry-encoding function no independent evidence
    purpose: Diagnostic tool to determine whether a given graph is hierarchical
    Introduced to ascertain hierarchical character from geometry

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5476 in / 1382 out tokens · 73194 ms · 2026-05-16T17:11:44.634131+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Forward citations

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