Affiliation:
1. Department of Statistics, University of California at Berkeley, 367 Evans Hall #3860, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA ()
Abstract
In the mean field (or random link) model there arenpoints and inter-point distances are independent random variables. For 0 <ℓ< ∞ and in then→ ∞ limit, letδ(ℓ) = 1/ntimes the maximum number of steps in a path whose average step-length is ≤ℓ. The functionδ(ℓ) is analogous to thepercolation functionin percolation theory: there is a critical valueℓ*= e−1at whichδ(·) becomes non-zero, and (presumably) a scaling exponentβin the senseδ(ℓ) ≈ (ℓ−ℓ*)β. Recently developed probabilistic methodology (in some sense a rephrasing of the cavity method developed in the 1980s by Mézard and Parisi) provides a simple, albeit non-rigorous, way of writing down such functions in terms of solutions of fixed-point equations for probability distributions. Solving numerically gives convincing evidence thatβ= 3. A parallel study withtreesandconnected edge-setsin place of paths gives scaling exponent 2, while the analogue for classical percolation has scaling exponent 1. The new exponents coincide with those recently found in a different context (comparing optimal and near-optimal solutions of the mean-field travelling salesman problem (TSP) and the minimum spanning tree (MST) problem), and reinforce the suggestion that scaling exponents determine universality classes for optimization problems on random points.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics
Cited by
7 articles.
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