English

Probabilistic Zero Forcing on Random Graphs

Combinatorics 2019-09-17 v1

Abstract

Zero forcing is a deterministic iterative graph coloring process in which vertices are colored either blue or white, and in every round, any blue vertices that have a single white neighbor force these white vertices to become blue. Here we study probabilistic zero forcing, where blue vertices have a non-zero probability of forcing each white neighbor to become blue. We explore the propagation time for probabilistic zero forcing on the Erd\H{o}s-R\'eyni random graph \Gnp\Gnp when we start with a single vertex colored blue. We show that when p=logo(1)np=\log^{-o(1)}n, then with high probability it takes (1+o(1))log2log2n(1+o(1))\log_2\log_2n rounds for all the vertices in \Gnp\Gnp to become blue, and when logn/nplogO(1)n\log n/n\ll p\leq \log^{-O(1)}n, then with high probability it takes Θ(log(1/p))\Theta(\log(1/p)) rounds.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1909.06568,
  title  = {Probabilistic Zero Forcing on Random Graphs},
  author = {Sean English and Calum MacRury and Pawel Pralat},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.06568},
  year   = {2019}
}