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Random Graphs, Geometry and Asymptotic Structure (London Mathematical Society Student Texts)

Random Graphs, Geometry and Asymptotic Structure (London Mathematical Society Student Texts)

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Michael Krivelevich, Konstantinos Panagiotou, Mathew Penrose, Colin McDiarmid
Cambridge University Press, 4/25/2016
EAN 9781107136571, ISBN10: 1107136571

Hardcover, 127 pages, 23.5 x 15.8 x 1.3 cm
Language: English

The theory of random graphs is a vital part of the education of any researcher entering the fascinating world of combinatorics. However, due to their diverse nature, the geometric and structural aspects of the theory often remain an obscure part of the formative study of young combinatorialists and probabilists. Moreover, the theory itself, even in its most basic forms, is often considered too advanced to be part of undergraduate curricula, and those who are interested usually learn it mostly through self-study, covering a lot of its fundamentals but little of the more recent developments. This book provides a self-contained and concise introduction to recent developments and techniques for classical problems in the theory of random graphs. Moreover, it covers geometric and topological aspects of the theory and introduces the reader to the diversity and depth of the methods that have been devised in this context.

Editors' introduction
Part I. Long Paths and Hamiltonicity in Random Graphs
1. Introduction
2. Tools
3. Long paths in random graphs
4. The appearance of Hamilton cycles in random graphs
References for Part I
Part II. Random Graphs from Restricted Classes
1. Introduction
2. Random trees
3. Random graphs from block-stable classes
References for Part II
Part III. Lectures on Random Geometric Graphs
1. Introduction
2. Edge counts
3. Edge counts
normal approximation
4. The maximum degree
5. A sufficient condition for connectivity
6. Connectivity and Hamiltonicity
7. Solutions to exercises
References for Part III
Part IV. On Random Graphs from a Minor-closed Class
1. Introduction
2. Properties of graph classes
3. Bridge-addability, being connected and the fragment
4 Growth constants
5. Unlabelled graphs
6. Smoothness
7. Concluding remarks
References for Part IV
Index.