arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:math/9310236 [math.PR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

The birth of the giant component

Svante Janson, Donald E. Knuth, Tomasz Łuczak, Boris Pittel

Published 1993-10-01Version 1

Limiting distributions are derived for the sparse connected components that are present when a random graph on $n$ vertices has approximately $\half n$ edges. In particular, we show that such a graph consists entirely of trees, unicyclic components, and bicyclic components with probability approaching $\sqrt{2\over 3} \cosh\sqrt{5\over 18}\approx0.9325$ as $n\to\infty$. The limiting probability that it consists of trees, unicyclic components, and at most one other component is approximately 0.9957; the limiting probability that it is planar lies between 0.987 and 0.9998. When a random graph evolves and the number of edges passes $\half n$, its components grow in cyclic complexity according to an interesting Markov process whose asymptotic structure is derived. The probability that there never is more than a single component with more edges than vertices, throughout the evolution, approaches $5\pi/18\approx0.8727$. A ``uniform'' model of random graphs, which allows self-loops and multiple edges, is shown to lead to formulas that are substantially simpler than the analogous formulas for the classical random graphs of Erd\H{o}s and R\'enyi. The notions of ``excess'' and ``deficiency,'' which are significant characteristics of the generating function as well as of the graphs themselves, lead to a mathematically attractive structural theory for the uniform model. A general approach to the study of stopping configurations makes it possible to sharpen previously obtained estimates in a uniform manner and often to obtain closed forms for the constants of interest. Empirical results are presented to complement the analysis, indicating the typical behavior when $n$ is near 20000.

Journal: Random Structures Algorithms 4 (1993), no. 3, 231--358
Categories: math.PR, math.CO
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1010.4595 [math.PR] (Published 2010-10-21, updated 2011-04-16)
Asymptotic normality of the size of the giant component via a random walk
arXiv:2501.02433 [math.PR] (Published 2025-01-05)
On the jump of the cover time in random geometric graphs
arXiv:1106.1022 [math.PR] (Published 2011-06-06, updated 2011-06-08)
Bohman-Frieze processes at criticality and emergence of the giant component