Phys. Rev. E 64, 041902 (2001) [7 pages]Are randomly grown graphs really random?Received 27 April 2001; published 20 September 2001 We analyze a minimal model of a growing network. At each time step, a new vertex is added; then, with probability δ, two vertices are chosen uniformly at random and joined by an undirected edge. This process is repeated for t time steps. In the limit of large t, the resulting graph displays surprisingly rich characteristics. In particular, a giant component emerges in an infinite-order phase transition at δ=1/8. At the transition, the average component size jumps discontinuously but remains finite. In contrast, a static random graph with the same degree distribution exhibits a second-order phase transition at δ=1/4, and the average component size diverges there. These dramatic differences between grown and static random graphs stem from a positive correlation between the degrees of connected vertices in the grown graph—older vertices tend to have higher degree, and to link with other high-degree vertices, merely by virtue of their age. We conclude that grown graphs, however randomly they are constructed, are fundamentally different from their static random graph counterparts. © 2001 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.64.041902
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.64.041902
PACS:
87.10.+e, 84.35.+i, 64.60.-i
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