English

Directed extended-range percolation

Disordered Systems and Neural Networks 2026-05-26 v1 Statistical Mechanics Physics and Society

Abstract

While for standard percolation directionality is known to increase the combinatorial complexity of percolation, here we show that when connectivity is ensured by paths of length R2R\geq 2, network directionality, impeding backtracking, can significantly reduce the complexity of percolation. To illustrate this finding, we introduce Directed Extended-Range Percolation (DERP), defined directed networks with non-reciprocal edges, motivated by applications in quantum communication. In this framework, message transmission is enabled between trusted nodes separated by a directed path of length at most RR. Using a message-passing approach, we show that directionality enables an exact determination of the percolation threshold and the anomalous critical indices on locally tree-like structures. On random directed networks we find that the critical behavior of DERP depends sensitively on degree correlations. These analytical predictions are corroborated by extensive Monte Carlo simulations, highlighting the profound impact of directionality and correlations on long-range connectivity in complex networks.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2605.22646,
  title  = {Directed extended-range percolation},
  author = {Wenbo Liu and Yiwen Zeng and Xueming Liu and Ginestra Bianconi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.22646},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

(6 pages, 4 figures, plus supplementary material)