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Bootstrap Percolation On Random Geometric Graphs, Alyssa Whittemore
Bootstrap Percolation On Random Geometric Graphs, Alyssa Whittemore
Department of Mathematics: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
Bootstrap Percolation is a discrete-time process that models the spread of information or disease across the vertex set of a graph. We consider the following version of this process:
Initially, each vertex of the graph is set active with probability p or inactive otherwise. Then, at each time step, every inactive vertex with at least k active neighbors becomes active. Active vertices will always remain active. The process ends when it reaches a stationary state. If all the vertices eventually become active, then we say we achieve percolation.
This process has been widely studied on many families of graphs, deterministic …
Extremal Trees And Reconstruction, Andrew Ray
Extremal Trees And Reconstruction, Andrew Ray
Department of Mathematics: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
Problems in two areas of graph theory will be considered.
First, I will consider extremal problems for trees. In these questions we examine the trees that maximize or minimize various invariants. For instance the number of independent sets, the number of matchings, the number of subtrees, the sum of pairwise distances, the spectral radius, and the number of homomorphisms to a fixed graph. I have two general approaches to these problems. To find the extremal trees in the collection of trees on n vertices with a fixed degree bound I use the certificate method. The certificate is a branch invariant, …