arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:2406.12689 [math.PR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

The contact process on dynamical random trees with degree dependence

Natalia Cardona-Tobón, Marcel Ortgiese, Marco Seiler, Anja Sturm

Published 2024-06-18Version 1

The contact process is a simple model for the spread of an infection in a structured population. We investigate the case when the underlying structure evolves dynamically as a degree-dependent dynamical percolation model. Starting with a connected locally finite base graph we initially declare edges independently open with a probability that is allowed to depend on the degree of the adjacent vertices and closed otherwise. Edges are independently updated with a rate depending on the degrees and then are again declared open and closed with the same probabilities. We are interested in the contact process, where infections are only allowed to spread via open edges. Our aim is to analyze the impact of the update speed and the probability for edges to be open on the existence of a phase transition. For a general connected locally finite graph, our first result gives sufficient conditions for the critical value for survival to be strictly positive. Furthermore, in the setting of Bienaym\'e-Galton-Watson trees, we show that the process survives strongly with positive probability for any infection rate if the offspring distribution has a stretched exponential tail with an exponent depending on the percolation probability and the update speed. In particular, if the offspring distribution follows a power law and the connection probability is given by a product kernel and the update speed exhibits polynomial behaviour, we provide a complete characterisation of the phase transition.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1405.0865 [math.PR] (Published 2014-05-05)
Phase transition of the contact process on random regular graphs
arXiv:2312.06251 [math.PR] (Published 2023-12-11)
The Contact Process on a Graph Adapting to the Infection
arXiv:math/0404046 [math.PR] (Published 2004-04-02)
The Contact Process on Trees