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How many random edges make an almost-Dirac graph Hamiltonian?

Alberto Espuny Díaz, Richarlotte Valérà Razafindravola

Abstract

We study Hamiltonicity in the union of an $n$-vertex graph $H$ with high minimum degree and a binomial random graph on the same vertex set. In particular, we consider the case when $H$ has minimum degree close to $n/2$. We determine the perturbed threshold for Hamiltonicity in this setting. To be precise, let $η:= n/2-δ(H)$. For $η=ω(1)$, we show that it suffices to add $Θ(η)$ random edges to $H$ to a.a.s. obtain a Hamiltonian graph; for $η=Θ(1)$, we show that $ω(1)$ edges suffice. In fact, when $η=o(n)$ and $η=ω(1)$, we show that $(8+o(1))η$ random edges suffice, which is best possible up to the error term. This determines the sharp perturbed threshold for Hamiltonicity in this range of degrees. We also obtain analogous results for perfect matchings, showing that, in this range of degrees, the sharp perturbed thresholds for Hamiltonicity and for perfect matchings differ by a factor of $2$.

How many random edges make an almost-Dirac graph Hamiltonian?

Abstract

We study Hamiltonicity in the union of an -vertex graph with high minimum degree and a binomial random graph on the same vertex set. In particular, we consider the case when has minimum degree close to . We determine the perturbed threshold for Hamiltonicity in this setting. To be precise, let . For , we show that it suffices to add random edges to to a.a.s. obtain a Hamiltonian graph; for , we show that edges suffice. In fact, when and , we show that random edges suffice, which is best possible up to the error term. This determines the sharp perturbed threshold for Hamiltonicity in this range of degrees. We also obtain analogous results for perfect matchings, showing that, in this range of degrees, the sharp perturbed thresholds for Hamiltonicity and for perfect matchings differ by a factor of .

Paper Structure

This paper contains 8 sections, 10 theorems, 6 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.2

Let $d=n/2-\eta$, where $1/2\leq\eta\leq n/64$. The $d$-threshold for Hamiltonicity is $\eta/n^2$.

Theorems & Definitions (17)

  • Definition 1.1
  • Theorem 1.2
  • Theorem 1.3
  • Corollary 1.4
  • Theorem 1.5
  • Theorem 2.1
  • Lemma 2.2: Dirac52
  • Lemma 2.3
  • proof
  • Lemma 2.4: BFKM04
  • ...and 7 more