Invasion Percolation on Power-Law Branching Processes
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Publication:6408032
arXiv2208.07827MaRDI QIDQ6408032FDOQ6408032
Authors: Rowel Gündlach, Remco van der Hofstad
Publication date: 16 August 2022
Abstract: We analyse the cluster discovered by invasion percolation on a branching process with a power-law offspring distribution. Invasion percolation is a paradigm model of self-organised criticality, where criticality is approached without tuning any parameter. By performing invasion percolation for steps, and letting , we find an infinite subtree, called the invasion percolation cluster (IPC). A notable feature of the IPC is its geometry that consists of a unique path to infinity (also called the backbone) onto which finite forests are attached. Our main theorem shows the volume scaling limit of the -cut IPC, which is the cluster containing the root when the edge between the -th and -st backbone vertices is cut. We assume a power-law offspring distribution with exponent and analyse the IPC for different power-law regimes. In a finite-variance setting our results are a natural extension of previous works on the branching process tree (Michelen et al. 2019) and the regular tree (Angel et al. 2008). However, for an infinite-variance setting () or even an infinite-mean setting (), results significantly change. This is illustrated by the volume scaling of the -cut IPC, which scales as for , but as for and exponentially for .
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