Percolation on a product of two trees (Q651007)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Percolation on a product of two trees
scientific article

    Statements

    Percolation on a product of two trees (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    8 December 2011
    0 references
    Using the standard concepts of percolation theory (see, e.g., [\textit{G. Grimmett}, Percolation. 2nd ed. Berlin: Springer. (1999; Zbl 0926.60004]) the author studies the \textit{triangle condition} validity. One says that a transitive graph \(G\) satisfies the triangle condition at some \(p\) if \[ \nabla_p:=\sum_{x,y\in G}\mathbb{P}_p(0\longleftrightarrow x)\mathbb{P}_p(x\longleftrightarrow y) \mathbb{P}_p(0\longleftrightarrow y)<\infty. \] \textit{M. Aizenman} and \textit{C. M. Newman} [J. Stat. Phys. 36, 107--143 (1984; Zbl 0586.60096] suggested this condition as a marker for ``mean-field behavior''. In particular, they proved that if \(\nabla_{p_c}<\infty\) then \(\mathbb{E}_p|C(0)|\approx (p_c-p)^{-1}\) as \(p\) tends to the critical probability \(p_c\) from below. Here \(C(0)=\{x:0\longleftrightarrow x\}\) and \(|C(0)|\) is its size. In the present paper G. Kozma established that if \(T\) is a regular tree of degree greater than two, then the product graph \(T\times T\) satisfies the triangle condition at \(p_c\). The proof does not examine the degree of vertices and is not ``perturbative'' in any sense. It relies on an unpublished lemma of O. Schramm.
    0 references
    0 references
    percolation on groups
    0 references
    triangle condition
    0 references
    mean field
    0 references
    product of trees
    0 references
    0 references