Khaydar Nurligareev's PhD defense
[version française de cette page]
Title
Irreducibility of combinatorial objects: asymptotic probability and interpretation
Abstract
Various combinatorial structures admit, in a broad sense, a notion of irreducibility: graphs can be connected, permutations can be indecomposable, polynomials can be irreducible, etc. In this thesis, we are interested in the probability that any such object picked randomly is irreducible, as its size tends to infinity. We obtain complete asymptotic expansions for these probabilities; irreducibility is understood via the combinatorial constructions SET, SEQ, and CYC within the symbolic method. We apply our approach to connected graphs, irreducible tournaments, indecomposable permutations, and perfect matchings. Also, we establish asymptotics for several models of connected surfaces, including square-tiled surfaces, combinatorial maps, and higher dimensional objects such as constellations, and colored tensor models. We show that the coefficients appearing in those asymptotics are integers and can be interpreted as the counting sequences of other “derivative” combinatorial classes. For instance, connected graphs lead to irreducible tournaments, square-tiled surfaces lead to indecomposable permutations, combinatorial maps lead to indecomposable perfect matchings. Moreover, we obtain asymptotic probabilities that a random combinatorial object has a given number of irreducible components. Switching from the symbolic method to the theory of species, we treat the Erdös–Rényi G(n,p) model as well. We also establish the probability that a random directed graph is strongly connected using a more complex decomposition that involves directed acyclic graphs.
Committee
- Jason Bell — University of Waterloo — Referee
- Olivier Bodini — University Sorbonne Paris Nord — Examiner
- Marthe Bonamy — CNRS & University of Bordeaux — Examiner
- Sylvie Corteel — CNRS & University Paris Diderot — Referee
- Thierry Monteil — CNRS & University Sorbonne Paris Nord — Co-supervisor
- Igor Pak — University of California, Los Angeles — Referee
- Lionel Pournin — University Sorbonne Paris Nord — Supervisor
Manuscript and slides
Here you can find the
manuscript,
as well as
slides
and the above
abstract
(both in English and in French).
Date and time
Thursday October 20, 2022, 6pm (Paris time)
Place
Room B107,
LIPN,
University Sorbonne Paris Nord
(Villetaneuse, France).
You can find a plan of the campus
here.
Also, it was possible to follow the event online via bbb.
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