Recognition: unknown
Coloring powers of random graphs
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 12:44 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The rth power of a sparse random graph has maximum degree asymptotically log n over the (r+1)th iterated logarithm, with chromatic number bounded by the maximum degrees of its floor(r/2)th and (r-1)th powers.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Given a graph G and integer r at least 1, the rth power G^r adds edges between all pairs at distance at most r. For G equal to the binomial random graph G(n,p) with p equal to d over n and d a fixed constant, the paper proves that with high probability the maximum degree satisfies Delta(G(n,p)^r) asymptotically equivalent to log n over log base (r+1) of n. It further proves that Delta(G(n,p) to the floor(r/2)) plus one is at most the chromatic number of G(n,p)^r, which is at most Delta(G(n,p) to the (r-1)) plus one, and that the upper bound is tight for r equal to 2. When d grows faster than log n yet stays at most n to the power 1/r minus Omega of 1, the chromatic number is Theta of d to r,
What carries the argument
The rth power graph construction on G(n,p), whose maximum degree is set by the number of vertices reachable in at most r steps and whose chromatic number is controlled by greedy coloring bounds from the maximum degrees of lower powers.
If this is right
- With high probability the maximum degree of G(n,p)^r follows the iterated-logarithm formula for any fixed r in the sparse regime.
- The chromatic number of the rth power is at most one more than the maximum degree of the (r-1)th power.
- When r equals 2 the chromatic number of the square equals exactly the maximum degree of the original graph plus one.
- In the denser regime the chromatic number grows as Theta(d^r over log d).
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same neighborhood-counting approach might yield analogous degree formulas for other distance-based graph operations such as distance graphs.
- Numerical checks on moderate-sized instances could reveal the speed of convergence to the asymptotic formulas.
- The bounds may suggest efficient coloring heuristics for powered random graphs by first coloring the underlying sparse graph.
Load-bearing premise
The binomial random graph G(n,p) in the given density ranges produces typical neighborhood sizes that yield the stated concentration for degrees in the powered graph.
What would settle it
Simulate a single large instance of G(n,p) with n around 10^6 and fixed d, compute the actual maximum degree in its rth power, and check whether it stays within a small constant factor of log n over the (r+1)th iterated log; a consistent large deviation would falsify the main degree claim.
read the original abstract
Given a graph $G$ and an integer $r\ge 1$, the $r$th power $G^r$ of $G$ is the graph obtained from $G$ by adding edges for all pairs of distinct vertices at distance at most $r$ from each other. We focus on two basic structural properties of the $r$th power of the binomial random graph $G_{n,p}$, namely, the maximum degree $\Delta(G_{n,p}^r)$ and the chromatic number $\chi(G_{n,p}^r)$, and give with high probability (w.h.p.) bounds. In the sparse case that $p=d/n$ for some fixed constant $d>0$, we prove the following. We prove that w.h.p.~$\Delta(G_{n,p}^r) \sim \frac{\log n}{\log_{(r+1)}n}$ (where $\log_{(1)}n=\log n$ and $\log_{(r+1)}n=\log\log_{(r)}n$) and that w.h.p.~$\Delta(G_{n,p}^{\lfloor{r/2}\rfloor})+1 \le \chi(G_{n,p}^r) \le \Delta(G_{n,p}^{r-1})+1$. For $r=2$, we show the upper bound holds with equality. For denser cases, for $d$ satisfying $d=\omega(\log n)$ and $d\le n^{1/r-\Omega(1)}$ as $n\to\infty$, we have $\chi(G_{n,p}^r) = \Theta(d^r/\log d)$ w.h.p.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript studies the maximum degree and chromatic number of the r-th power G^r of the binomial random graph G_{n,p}. In the sparse regime p = d/n with fixed d > 0, it proves w.h.p. that Δ(G_{n,p}^r) ∼ log n / log_{(r+1)} n (with the iterated logarithm defined recursively), together with the sandwich Δ(G_{n,p}^{⌊r/2⌋}) + 1 ≤ χ(G_{n,p}^r) ≤ Δ(G_{n,p}^{r-1}) + 1; equality holds in the upper bound when r = 2. In the denser regime d = ω(log n) and d ≤ n^{1/r − Ω(1)}, it establishes χ(G_{n,p}^r) = Θ(d^r / log d) w.h.p.
Significance. If the claims hold, the work supplies precise, parameter-free asymptotics for the maximum degree of random-graph powers in the sparse regime and tight chromatic-number bounds that exploit the local tree-like geometry and ball-clique structure. The denser-regime result aligns with known inhomogeneous-random-graph chromatic-number asymptotics. These are natural and useful extensions of classical G(n,p) results; the explicit matching of lower and upper bounds for r = 2 is a particular strength.
minor comments (3)
- The definition of the iterated logarithm log_{(r+1)} n is given only in the abstract; it should be restated at the beginning of the sparse-case section for self-contained reading.
- In the statement of the denser regime, the hidden constant inside the Ω(1) in the upper bound on d should be made explicit (or at least bounded) so that the precise range of validity is clear.
- The proof sketch for the lower bound χ(G^r) ≥ Δ(G^{⌊r/2⌋}) + 1 relies on the existence of a clique formed by a maximum ball of radius ⌊r/2⌋; a short paragraph confirming that the diameter argument survives the random-graph local structure would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive summary of our results on the maximum degree and chromatic number of powers of random graphs, and for recommending minor revision. No specific major comments were provided in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation self-contained in G(n,p) model
full rationale
The paper establishes w.h.p. bounds on Δ(G_{n,p}^r) and χ(G_{n,p}^r) via direct probabilistic analysis of the binomial random graph. The lower bound χ(G^r) ≥ Δ(G^{⌊r/2⌋})+1 follows from the structural fact that radius-⌊r/2⌋ balls induce cliques in the power graph (diameter ≤ r). The upper bound exploits the locally tree-like structure of G(n,p) for a strengthened greedy coloring. The Θ(d^r/log d) asymptotic in the denser regime matches standard results for inhomogeneous random graphs with effective degree Θ(d^r). No equations reduce claims to fitted parameters, self-definitions, or load-bearing self-citations; all steps are independent consequences of the stated G(n,p) regimes.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Binomial random graph G(n,p) model with the given p regimes
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Algorithmic Phase Transition for Large Independent Sets in Dense Hypergraphs
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