Saturation in the Hypercube and Bootstrap Percolation
Abstract
Let Qd denote the hypercube of dimension d. Given d≥ m, a spanning subgraph G of Qd is said to be (Qd,Qm)-saturated if it does not contain Qm as a subgraph but adding any edge of E(Qd) E(G) creates a copy of Qm in G. Answering a question of Johnson and Pinto, we show that for every fixed m≥2 the minimum number of edges in a (Qd,Qm)-saturated graph is (2d). We also study weak saturation, which is a form of bootstrap percolation. A spanning subgraph of Qd is said to be weakly (Qd,Qm)-saturated if the edges of E(Qd) E(G) can be added to G one at a time so that each added edge creates a new copy of Qm. Answering another question of Johnson and Pinto, we determine the minimum number of edges in a weakly (Qd,Qm)-saturated graph for all d≥ m≥1. More generally, we determine the minimum number of edges in a subgraph of the d-dimensional grid Pkd which is weakly saturated with respect to `axis aligned' copies of a smaller grid Prm. We also study weak saturation of cycles in the grid.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.