English

The t-stability number of a random graph

Combinatorics 2010-10-27 v2 Probability

Abstract

Given a graph G = (V,E), a vertex subset S is called t-stable (or t-dependent) if the subgraph G[S] induced on S has maximum degree at most t. The t-stability number of G is the maximum order of a t-stable set in G. We investigate the typical values that this parameter takes on a random graph on n vertices and edge probability equal to p. For any fixed 0 < p < 1 and fixed non-negative integer t, we show that, with probability tending to 1 as n grows, the t-stability number takes on at most two values which we identify as functions of t, p and n. The main tool we use is an asymptotic expression for the expected number of t-stable sets of order k. We derive this expression by performing a precise count of the number of graphs on k vertices that have maximum degree at most k. Using the above results, we also obtain asymptotic bounds on the t-improper chromatic number of a random graph (this is the generalisation of the chromatic number, where we partition of the vertex set of the graph into t-stable sets).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.0141,
  title  = {The t-stability number of a random graph},
  author = {Nikolaos Fountoulakis and Ross J. Kang and Colin McDiarmid},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.0141},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

25 pages; v2 has 30 pages and is identical to the journal version apart from formatting and a minor amendment to Lemma 8 (and its proof on p. 21)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:15:27.701Z