- Series
- Graph Theory Seminar
- Time
- Thursday, October 13, 2016 - 1:30pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Pavel Skums – Department of Computer Science, Georgia State University
- Organizer
- Robin Thomas
Lately there was a growing interest in studying
self-similarity and fractal
properties of graphs, which is largely inspired by applications in
biology,
sociology and chemistry. Such studies often employ statistical physics
methods that borrow some ideas from graph theory and general topology, but
are not intended to approach the problems under consideration in a
rigorous
mathematical way. To the best of our knowledge, a rigorous combinatorial
theory that defines and studies graph-theoretical analogues of topological
fractals still has not been developed.
In this paper we introduce and study discrete analogues of Lebesgue and
Hausdorff dimensions for graphs. It turned out that they are
closely related to well-known graph characteristics such as rank dimension
and Prague (or Nesetril-Rodl) dimension. It allowed us to formally define
fractal graphs and establish fractality of some graph classes. We show,
how
Hausdorff dimension of graphs is related to their Kolmogorov complexity.
We
also demonstrate fruitfulness of this interdisciplinary approach by
discover a novel property of general compact metric spaces using ideas
from
hypergraphs theory and by proving an estimation for Prague dimension of
almost all graphs using methods from algorithmic information theory.