Explosive appearance of cores and bootstrap percolation on lattices
Abstract
Consider the process where the n vertices of a square 2-dimensional torus appear consecutively in a random order. We show that typically the size of the 3-core of the corresponding induced unit-distance graph transitions from 0 to n-o(n) within a single step. Equivalently, by infecting the vertices of the torus in a random order, under two-neighbour bootstrap percolation, the size of the infected set transitions instantaneously from o(n) to n. This hitting time result answers a question of Benjamini. We also study the much more challenging and general setting of bootstrap percolation on two-dimensional lattices for a variety of finite-range infection rules. In this case, powerful but fragile bootstrap percolation tools such as the rectangles process and the Aizenman-Lebowitz lemma become unavailable. We develop a new method complementing and replacing these standard techniques, thus allowing us to prove the above hitting time result for a wide family of threshold bootstrap percolation rules on the 2-dimensional square lattice, including neighbourhoods given by large p balls for p∈[1,∞].
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