The Evolution of the Mixing Rate
classification
🧮 math.CO
math.PR
keywords
mixingcomponentrandomtimeaveragedegreelargestproved
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In this paper we present a study of the mixing time of a random walk on the largest component of a supercritical random graph, also known as the giant component. We identify local obstructions that slow down the random walk, when the average degree d is at most (ln n lnln n)^{1/2}, proving that the mixing time in this case is O((ln n/d)^2) asymptotically almost surely. As the average degree grows these become negligible and it is the diameter of the largest component that takes over, yielding mixing time O(ln n/ln d). We proved these results during the 2003-04 academic year. Similar results but for constant d were later proved independently by I. Benjamini, G. Kozma and N. Wormald.
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