Accessibility percolation and first-passage site percolation on the unoriented binary hypercube
Abstract
Inspired by biological evolution, we consider the following so-called accessibility percolation problem: The vertices of the unoriented n-dimensional binary hypercube are assigned independent U(0, 1) weights, referred to as fitnesses. A path is considered accessible if fitnesses are strictly increasing along it. We prove that the probability that the global fitness maximum is accessible from the all zeroes vertex converges to 1-12(2+5) as n→∞. Moreover, we prove that if one conditions on the location of the fitness maximum being v, then provided v is not too close to the all zeroes vertex in Hamming distance, the probability that v is accessible converges to a function of this distance divided by n as n→∞. This resolves a conjecture by Berestycki, Brunet and Shi in almost full generality. As a second result we show that, for any graph, accessibility percolation can equivalently be formulated in terms of first-passage site percolation. This connection is of particular importance for the study of accessibility percolation on trees.
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