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graph theory In mathematics and computer science, graph theory is the study of ''graph (discrete mathematics), graphs'', which are mathematical structures used to model pairwise relations between objects. A graph in this context is made up of ''Vertex (graph ...
, an expander graph is a
sparse graph In mathematics, a dense graph is a Graph (discrete mathematics), graph in which the number of edges is close to the maximal number of edges (where every pair of Vertex (graph theory), vertices is connected by one edge). The opposite, a graph with ...
that has strong connectivity properties, quantified using vertex,
edge Edge or EDGE may refer to: Technology Computing * Edge computing, a network load-balancing system * Edge device, an entry point to a computer network * Adobe Edge, a graphical development application * Microsoft Edge, a web browser developed by ...
or
spectral ''Spectral'' is a 2016 Hungarian-American military science fiction action film co-written and directed by Nic Mathieu. Written with Ian Fried & George Nolfi, the film stars James Badge Dale as DARPA research scientist Mark Clyne, with Max Marti ...
expansion. Expander constructions have spawned research in pure and applied mathematics, with several applications to complexity theory, design of robust
computer network A computer network is a collection of communicating computers and other devices, such as printers and smart phones. In order to communicate, the computers and devices must be connected by wired media like copper cables, optical fibers, or b ...
s, and the theory of
error-correcting code In computing, telecommunication, information theory, and coding theory, forward error correction (FEC) or channel coding is a technique used for controlling errors in data transmission over unreliable or noisy communication channels. The centra ...
s.


Definitions

Intuitively, an expander graph is a finite, undirected
multigraph In mathematics, and more specifically in graph theory, a multigraph is a graph which is permitted to have multiple edges (also called ''parallel edges''), that is, edges that have the same end nodes. Thus two vertices may be connected by mor ...
in which every subset of the vertices that is not "too large" has a "large" boundary. Different formalisations of these notions give rise to different notions of expanders: ''edge expanders'', ''vertex expanders'', and ''spectral expanders'', as defined below. A disconnected graph is not an expander, since the boundary of a connected component is empty. Every connected finite graph is an expander; however, different connected graphs have different expansion parameters. The
complete graph In the mathematical field of graph theory, a complete graph is a simple undirected graph in which every pair of distinct vertices is connected by a unique edge. A complete digraph is a directed graph in which every pair of distinct vertices i ...
has the best expansion property, but it has largest possible degree. Informally, a graph is a good expander if it has low degree and high expansion parameters.


Edge expansion

The ''edge expansion'' (also ''isoperimetric number'' or
Cheeger constant In Riemannian geometry, the Cheeger isoperimetric constant of a compact Riemannian manifold ''M'' is a positive real number ''h''(''M'') defined in terms of the minimal area of a hypersurface that divides ''M'' into two disjoint pieces. In 1971, ...
) of a graph on vertices is defined as : h(G) = \min_ \frac, :where \partial S := \, which can also be written as with the complement of and : E(A,B) = \ the edges between the subsets of vertices . In the equation, the minimum is over all nonempty sets of at most vertices and is the ''edge boundary'' of , i.e., the set of edges with exactly one endpoint in . Intuitively, : \min = \min E(, \overline) is the minimum number of edges that need to be cut in order to split the graph in two. The edge expansion normalizes this concept by dividing with smallest number of vertices among the two parts. To see how the normalization can drastically change the value, consider the following example. Take two complete graphs with the same number of vertices and add edges between the two graphs by connecting their vertices one-to-one. The minimum cut will be but the edge expansion will be 1. Notice that in , the optimization can be equivalently done either over or over any non-empty subset, since E(S, \overline) = E(\overline, S). The same is not true for because of the normalization by . If we want to write with an optimization over all non-empty subsets, we can rewrite it as : h(G) = \min_ \frac.


Vertex expansion

The ''vertex isoperimetric number'' (also ''vertex expansion'' or ''magnification'') of a graph is defined as : h_(G) = \min_ \frac, where is the ''outer boundary'' of , i.e., the set of vertices in with at least one neighbor in . In a variant of this definition (called ''unique neighbor expansion'') is replaced by the set of vertices in with ''exactly'' one neighbor in . The ''vertex isoperimetric number'' of a graph is defined as : h_(G) = \min_ \frac, where \partial_(S) is the ''inner boundary'' of , i.e., the set of vertices in with at least one neighbor in .


Spectral expansion

When is -regular, a
linear algebra Linear algebra is the branch of mathematics concerning linear equations such as :a_1x_1+\cdots +a_nx_n=b, linear maps such as :(x_1, \ldots, x_n) \mapsto a_1x_1+\cdots +a_nx_n, and their representations in vector spaces and through matrix (mathemat ...
ic definition of expansion is possible based on the
eigenvalues In linear algebra, an eigenvector ( ) or characteristic vector is a vector that has its direction unchanged (or reversed) by a given linear transformation. More precisely, an eigenvector \mathbf v of a linear transformation T is scaled by a ...
of the
adjacency matrix In graph theory and computer science, an adjacency matrix is a square matrix used to represent a finite graph (discrete mathematics), graph. The elements of the matrix (mathematics), matrix indicate whether pairs of Vertex (graph theory), vertices ...
of , where is the number of edges between vertices and . Because is
symmetric Symmetry () in everyday life refers to a sense of harmonious and beautiful proportion and balance. In mathematics, the term has a more precise definition and is usually used to refer to an object that is invariant under some transformations ...
, the
spectral theorem In linear algebra and functional analysis, a spectral theorem is a result about when a linear operator or matrix can be diagonalized (that is, represented as a diagonal matrix in some basis). This is extremely useful because computations involvin ...
implies that has real-valued eigenvalues . It is known that all these eigenvalues are in and more specifically, it is known that if and only if is bipartite. More formally, we refer to an -vertex, -regular graph with :\max_, \lambda_i, \leq \lambda as an -''graph''. The bound given by an -graph on for is useful in many contexts, including the
expander mixing lemma The expander mixing lemma intuitively states that the edges of certain d-regular graphs are evenly distributed throughout the graph. In particular, the number of edges between two vertex subsets S and T is always close to the expected number of edg ...
. Spectral expansion can be ''two-sided'', as above, with \max_, \lambda_i, \leq \lambda, or it can be ''one-sided'', with \max_\lambda_i \leq \lambda. The latter is a weaker notion that holds also for bipartite graphs and is still useful for many applications, such as the Alon–Chung lemma. Because is regular, the uniform distribution u\in\R^n with for all is the
stationary distribution Stationary distribution may refer to: * and , a special distribution for a Markov chain such that if the chain starts with its stationary distribution, the marginal distribution of all states at any time will always be the stationary distribution. ...
of . That is, we have , and is an
eigenvector In linear algebra, an eigenvector ( ) or characteristic vector is a vector that has its direction unchanged (or reversed) by a given linear transformation. More precisely, an eigenvector \mathbf v of a linear transformation T is scaled by ...
of with eigenvalue , where is the degree of the vertices of . The ''
spectral gap In mathematics, the spectral gap is the difference between the moduli of the two largest eigenvalues of a matrix or operator; alternately, it is sometimes taken as the smallest non-zero eigenvalue. Various theorems relate this difference to oth ...
'' of is defined to be , and it measures the spectral expansion of the graph . If we set :\lambda=\max\ as this is the largest eigenvalue corresponding to an eigenvector
orthogonal In mathematics, orthogonality (mathematics), orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of ''perpendicularity''. Although many authors use the two terms ''perpendicular'' and ''orthogonal'' interchangeably, the term ''perpendic ...
to , it can be equivalently defined using the
Rayleigh quotient In mathematics, the Rayleigh quotient () for a given complex Hermitian matrix M and nonzero vector ''x'' is defined as:R(M,x) = .For real matrices and vectors, the condition of being Hermitian reduces to that of being symmetric, and the conjugat ...
: :\lambda=\max_ \frac, where :\, v\, _2=\left(\sum_^n v_i^2\right)^ is the
2-norm In mathematics, a norm is a function from a real or complex vector space to the non-negative real numbers that behaves in certain ways like the distance from the origin: it commutes with scaling, obeys a form of the triangle inequality, and ze ...
of the vector v\in\R^n. The normalized versions of these definitions are also widely used and more convenient in stating some results. Here one considers the matrix , which is the
Markov transition matrix In mathematics, a stochastic matrix is a square matrix used to describe the transitions of a Markov chain. Each of its entries is a nonnegative real number representing a probability. It is also called a probability matrix, transition matrix, '' ...
of the graph . Its eigenvalues are between −1 and 1. For not necessarily regular graphs, the spectrum of a graph can be defined similarly using the eigenvalues of the
Laplacian matrix In the mathematical field of graph theory, the Laplacian matrix, also called the graph Laplacian, admittance matrix, Kirchhoff matrix, or discrete Laplacian, is a matrix representation of a graph. Named after Pierre-Simon Laplace, the graph Lap ...
. For directed graphs, one considers the
singular values In mathematics, in particular functional analysis, the singular values of a compact operator T: X \rightarrow Y acting between Hilbert spaces X and Y, are the square roots of the (necessarily non-negative) eigenvalues of the self-adjoint operator ...
of the adjacency matrix , which are equal to the roots of the eigenvalues of the symmetric matrix .


Expander families

A family (G_i)_ of d-regular graphs of increasing size is an expander family if h(G_i) is bounded away from zero.


Relationships between different expansion properties

The expansion parameters defined above are related to each other. In particular, for any -regular graph , :h_(G) \le h(G) \le d \cdot h_(G). Consequently, for constant degree graphs, vertex and edge expansion are qualitatively the same.


Cheeger inequalities

When is -regular, meaning each vertex is of degree , there is a relationship between the isoperimetric constant and the gap in the spectrum of the adjacency operator of . By standard spectral graph theory, the trivial eigenvalue of the adjacency operator of a -regular graph is and the first non-trivial eigenvalue is . If is connected, then . An inequality due to Dodziuk and independently Alon and
Milman Milman may refer to: People with the surname * Adolf Milman (1886–1930), Russian and French painter * David Milman (1912–1982), mathematician * Dov Milman (1919–2007), Israeli politician and diplomat * Sir Francis Milman, 1st Baronet (1 ...
states that : \tfrac(d - \lambda_2) \le h(G) \le \sqrt. In fact, the lower bound is tight. The lower bound is achieved in limit for the
hypercube In geometry, a hypercube is an ''n''-dimensional analogue of a square ( ) and a cube ( ); the special case for is known as a ''tesseract''. It is a closed, compact, convex figure whose 1- skeleton consists of groups of opposite parallel l ...
, where and . The upper bound is (asymptotically) achieved for a cycle, where and . A better bound is given in as : h(G) \le \sqrt. These inequalities are closely related to the
Cheeger bound In mathematics, the Cheeger bound is a bound of the second largest eigenvalue of the transition matrix of a finite-state, discrete-time, reversible stationary Markov chain. It can be seen as a special case of Cheeger inequalities in expander graph ...
for
Markov chains In probability theory and statistics, a Markov chain or Markov process is a stochastic process describing a sequence of possible events in which the probability of each event depends only on the state attained in the previous event. Informally, ...
and can be seen as a discrete version of Cheeger's inequality in
Riemannian geometry Riemannian geometry is the branch of differential geometry that studies Riemannian manifolds, defined as manifold, smooth manifolds with a ''Riemannian metric'' (an inner product on the tangent space at each point that varies smooth function, smo ...
. Similar connections between vertex isoperimetric numbers and the spectral gap have also been studied: : h_(G)\le \left(\sqrt + 1\right)^2 -1 : h_(G) \le \sqrt. Asymptotically speaking, the quantities , , and are all bounded above by the spectral gap .


Constructions

There are four general strategies for explicitly constructing families of expander graphs. The first strategy is algebraic and group-theoretic, the second strategy is analytic and uses
additive combinatorics Additive combinatorics is an area of combinatorics in mathematics. One major area of study in additive combinatorics are ''inverse problems'': given the size of the sumset is small, what can we say about the structures of and ? In the case of th ...
, the third strategy is combinatorial and uses the
zig-zag A zigzag is a pattern made up of small corners at variable angles, though constant within the zigzag, tracing a path between two parallel lines; it can be described as both jagged and fairly regular. In geometry, this pattern is described as a ...
and related graph products, and the fourth strategy is based on lifts.
Noga Alon Noga Alon (; born 1956) is an Israeli mathematician and a professor of mathematics at Princeton University noted for his contributions to combinatorics and theoretical computer science, having authored hundreds of papers. Education and career ...
showed that certain graphs constructed from finite geometries are the sparsest examples of highly expanding graphs.


Margulis–Gabber–Galil

Algebraic constructions based on
Cayley graph In mathematics, a Cayley graph, also known as a Cayley color graph, Cayley diagram, group diagram, or color group, is a Graph (discrete mathematics), graph that encodes the abstract structure of a group (mathematics), group. Its definition is sug ...
s are known for various variants of expander graphs. The following construction is due to Margulis and has been analysed by Gabber and Galil. For every natural number , one considers the graph with the vertex set \mathbb Z_n \times \mathbb Z_n, where \mathbb Z_n=\mathbb Z/n\mathbb Z: For every vertex (x,y)\in\mathbb Z_n \times \mathbb Z_n, its eight adjacent vertices are :(x \pm 2y,y), (x \pm (2y+1),y), (x,y \pm 2x), (x,y \pm (2x+1)). Then the following holds:
Theorem. For all , the graph has second-largest eigenvalue \lambda(G)\leq 5 \sqrt.


Ramanujan graphs

By a theorem of Alon and Boppana, all sufficiently large -regular graphs satisfy \lambda_2 \ge 2\sqrt - o(1), where is the second largest eigenvalue in absolute value. As a direct consequence, we know that for every fixed and \lambda< 2 \sqrt , there are only finitely many -graphs.
Ramanujan graph In the mathematical field of spectral graph theory, a Ramanujan graph is a regular graph whose spectral gap is almost as large as possible (see extremal graph theory). Such graphs are excellent expander graph, spectral expanders. As Murty's survey ...
s are -regular graphs for which this bound is tight, satisfying :\lambda = \max_ , \lambda_i, \le 2\sqrt. Hence Ramanujan graphs have an asymptotically smallest possible value of . This makes them excellent spectral expanders. Lubotzky, Phillips, and Sarnak (1988), Margulis (1988), and Morgenstern (1994) show how Ramanujan graphs can be constructed explicitly. In 1985, Alon, conjectured that most -regular graphs on vertices, for sufficiently large , are almost Ramanujan. That is, for , they satisfy :\lambda \le 2\sqrt+\varepsilon. In 2003, Joel Friedman both proved the conjecture and specified what is meant by "most -regular graphs" by showing that random -regular graphs have \lambda \le 2\sqrt+\varepsilon for every with probability , where :\tau = \left\lceil\frac \right\rceil. A simpler proof of a slightly weaker result was given by Puder.
Marcus Marcus, Markus, Márkus or Mărcuș may refer to: * Marcus (name), a masculine given name * Marcus (praenomen), a Roman personal name Places * Marcus, a main belt asteroid, also known as (369088) Marcus 2008 GG44 * Mărcuş, a village in Dobârl ...
, Spielman and
Srivastava Srivastava (; ), also spelled variously as Shrivastava, Shrivastav or Srivastav, is a common surname found among the Chitraguptavanshi Kayastha community of upper caste Hindus particularly in the Hindi-speaking regions of India. The Chitragupta ...
, gave a construction of bipartite Ramanujan graphs based on lifts. In 2024 a preprint by Jiaoyang Huang, Theo McKenzieand and Horng-Tzer Yau proved that :\lambda \le 2\sqrt. with the fraction of eigenvalues that hit the Alon-Boppana bound approximately 69% from proving that edge universality holds, that is they follow a Tracy-Widom distribution associated with the
Gaussian Orthogonal Ensemble In probability theory and mathematical physics, a random matrix is a matrix-valued random variable—that is, a matrix in which some or all of its entries are sampled randomly from a probability distribution. Random matrix theory (RMT) is the s ...


Zig-zag product

Reingold, Vadhan, and Wigderson introduced the zig-zag product in 2003. Roughly speaking, the zig-zag product of two expander graphs produces a graph with only slightly worse expansion. Therefore, a zig-zag product can also be used to construct families of expander graphs. If is a -graph and is an -graph, then the zig-zag product is a -graph where has the following properties. # If and , then ; # . Specifically, :\phi(\lambda_1, \lambda_2)=\frac(1-\lambda^2_2)\lambda_2 +\frac\sqrt. Note that property (1) implies that the zig-zag product of two expander graphs is also an expander graph, thus zig-zag products can be used inductively to create a family of expander graphs. Intuitively, the construction of the zig-zag product can be thought of in the following way. Each vertex of is blown up to a "cloud" of vertices, each associated to a different edge connected to the vertex. Each vertex is now labeled as where refers to an original vertex of and refers to the th edge of . Two vertices, and are connected if it is possible to get from to through the following sequence of moves. # ''Zig'' – Move from to , using an edge of . # Jump across clouds using edge in to get to . # ''Zag'' – Move from to using an edge of .


Lifts

An -lift of a graph is formed by replacing each vertex by vertices, and each edge by a matching between the corresponding sets of r vertices. The lifted graph inherits the eigenvalues of the original graph, and has some additional eigenvalues. Bilu and Linial showed that every -regular graph has a 2-lift in which the additional eigenvalues are at most O(\sqrt) in magnitude. They also showed that if the starting graph is a good enough expander, then a good 2-lift can be found in
polynomial time In theoretical computer science, the time complexity is the computational complexity that describes the amount of computer time it takes to run an algorithm. Time complexity is commonly estimated by counting the number of elementary operations p ...
, thus giving an efficient construction of -regular expanders for every . Bilu and Linial conjectured that the bound O(\sqrt) can be improved to 2\sqrt, which would be optimal due to the Alon–Boppana bound. This conjecture was proved in the bipartite setting by
Marcus Marcus, Markus, Márkus or Mărcuș may refer to: * Marcus (name), a masculine given name * Marcus (praenomen), a Roman personal name Places * Marcus, a main belt asteroid, also known as (369088) Marcus 2008 GG44 * Mărcuş, a village in Dobârl ...
, Spielman and
Srivastava Srivastava (; ), also spelled variously as Shrivastava, Shrivastav or Srivastav, is a common surname found among the Chitraguptavanshi Kayastha community of upper caste Hindus particularly in the Hindi-speaking regions of India. The Chitragupta ...
, who used the method of interlacing polynomials. As a result, they obtained an alternative construction of bipartite
Ramanujan graph In the mathematical field of spectral graph theory, a Ramanujan graph is a regular graph whose spectral gap is almost as large as possible (see extremal graph theory). Such graphs are excellent expander graph, spectral expanders. As Murty's survey ...
s. The original non-constructive proof was turned into an algorithm by Michael B. Cohen. Later the method was generalized to -lifts by Hall, Puder and Sawin.


Randomized constructions

There are many results that show the existence of graphs with good expansion properties through probabilistic arguments. In fact, the existence of expanders was first proved by Pinsker who showed that for a randomly chosen vertex left regular
bipartite graph In the mathematics, mathematical field of graph theory, a bipartite graph (or bigraph) is a Graph (discrete mathematics), graph whose vertex (graph theory), vertices can be divided into two disjoint sets, disjoint and Independent set (graph theo ...
, for all subsets of vertices with high probability, where is a constant depending on that is . Alon and Roichman showed that for every , there is some such that the following holds: For a group of order , consider the Cayley graph on with randomly chosen elements from . Then, in the limit of getting to infinity, the resulting graph is almost surely an -expander. In 2021, Alexander modified an MCMC algorithm to look for randomized constructions to produce Ramanujan graphs with a fixed vertex size and degree of regularity. The results show the Ramanujan graphs exist for every vertex size and degree pair up to 2000 vertices. In 2024 Alon produced an explicit construction for near Ramanujan graphs of every vertex size and degree pair.


Applications and useful properties

The original motivation for expanders is to build economical robust networks (phone or computer): an expander with bounded degree is precisely an asymptotic robust graph with the number of edges growing linearly with size (number of vertices), for all subsets. Expander graphs have found extensive applications in
computer science Computer science is the study of computation, information, and automation. Computer science spans Theoretical computer science, theoretical disciplines (such as algorithms, theory of computation, and information theory) to Applied science, ...
, in designing
algorithm In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm () is a finite sequence of Rigour#Mathematics, mathematically rigorous instructions, typically used to solve a class of specific Computational problem, problems or to perform a computation. Algo ...
s,
error correcting codes In computing, telecommunication, information theory, and coding theory, forward error correction (FEC) or channel coding is a technique used for controlling errors in data transmission over unreliable or noisy communication channels. The centra ...
, extractors,
pseudorandom generator In theoretical computer science and cryptography, a pseudorandom generator (PRG) for a class of statistical tests is a deterministic procedure that maps a random seed to a longer pseudorandom string such that no statistical test in the class c ...
s,
sorting network In computer science, comparator networks are abstract devices built up of a fixed number of "wires", carrying values, and comparator modules that connect pairs of wires, swapping the values on the wires if they are not in a desired order. Such ne ...
s () and robust
computer network A computer network is a collection of communicating computers and other devices, such as printers and smart phones. In order to communicate, the computers and devices must be connected by wired media like copper cables, optical fibers, or b ...
s. They have also been used in proofs of many important results in
computational complexity theory In theoretical computer science and mathematics, computational complexity theory focuses on classifying computational problems according to their resource usage, and explores the relationships between these classifications. A computational problem ...
, such as SL =  L () and the
PCP theorem In computational complexity theory, the PCP theorem (also known as the PCP characterization theorem) states that every decision problem in the NP complexity class has probabilistically checkable proofs ( proofs that can be checked by a randomiz ...
(). In
cryptography Cryptography, or cryptology (from "hidden, secret"; and ''graphein'', "to write", or ''-logy, -logia'', "study", respectively), is the practice and study of techniques for secure communication in the presence of Adversary (cryptography), ...
, expander graphs are used to construct
hash function A hash function is any Function (mathematics), function that can be used to map data (computing), data of arbitrary size to fixed-size values, though there are some hash functions that support variable-length output. The values returned by a ...
s. In
2006 survey of expander graphs
Hoory, Linial, and Wigderson split the study of expander graphs into four categories: extremal problems, typical behavior, explicit constructions, and algorithms. Extremal problems focus on the bounding of expansion parameters, while typical behavior problems characterize how the expansion parameters are distributed over
random graph In mathematics, random graph is the general term to refer to probability distributions over graphs. Random graphs may be described simply by a probability distribution, or by a random process which generates them. The theory of random graphs l ...
s. Explicit constructions focus on constructing graphs that optimize certain parameters, and algorithmic questions study the evaluation and estimation of parameters.


Expander mixing lemma

The expander mixing lemma states that for an -graph, for any two subsets of the vertices , the number of edges between and is approximately what you would expect in a random -regular graph. The approximation is better the smaller is. In a random -regular graph, as well as in an Erdős–Rényi random graph with edge probability , we expect edges between and . More formally, let denote the number of edges between and . If the two sets are not disjoint, edges in their intersection are counted twice, that is, : E(S,T)=2, E(G \cap T, + E(S\setminus T,T) + E(S,T\setminus S). Then the expander mixing lemma says that the following inequality holds: :\left, E(S, T) - \frac\ \leq \lambda \sqrt. Many properties of -graphs are corollaries of the expander mixing lemmas, including the following. * An independent set of a graph is a subset of vertices with no two vertices adjacent. In an -graph, an independent set has size at most . * The
chromatic number In graph theory, graph coloring is a methodic assignment of labels traditionally called "colors" to elements of a graph. The assignment is subject to certain constraints, such as that no two adjacent elements have the same color. Graph coloring i ...
of a graph , , is the minimum number of colors needed such that adjacent vertices have different colors. Hoffman showed that , while Alon, Krivelevich, and Sudakov showed that if , then \chi(G) \leq O \left( \frac \right). * The
diameter In geometry, a diameter of a circle is any straight line segment that passes through the centre of the circle and whose endpoints lie on the circle. It can also be defined as the longest Chord (geometry), chord of the circle. Both definitions a ...
of a graph is the maximum distance between two vertices, where the distance between two vertices is defined to be the shortest path between them. Chung showed that the diameter of an -graph is at most \left\lceil \log \frac \right\rceil.


Expander walk sampling

The
Chernoff bound In probability theory, a Chernoff bound is an exponentially decreasing upper bound on the tail of a random variable based on its moment generating function. The minimum of all such exponential bounds forms ''the'' Chernoff or Chernoff-Cramér boun ...
states that, when sampling many independent samples from a random variable in the range , with high probability the average of our samples is close to the expectation of the random variable. The expander walk sampling lemma, due to and , states that this also holds true when sampling from a walk on an expander graph. This is particularly useful in the theory of
derandomization A randomized algorithm is an algorithm that employs a degree of randomness as part of its logic or procedure. The algorithm typically uses uniformly random bits as an auxiliary input to guide its behavior, in the hope of achieving good performan ...
, since sampling according to an expander walk uses many fewer random bits than sampling independently.


AKS sorting network and approximate halvers

Sorting networks take a set of inputs and perform a series of parallel steps to sort the inputs. A parallel step consists of performing any number of disjoint comparisons and potentially swapping pairs of compared inputs. The depth of a network is given by the number of parallel steps it takes. Expander graphs play an important role in the AKS sorting network, which achieves depth . While this is asymptotically the best known depth for a sorting network, the reliance on expanders makes the constant bound too large for practical use. Within the AKS sorting network, expander graphs are used to construct bounded depth -halvers. An -halver takes as input a length permutation of and halves the inputs into two disjoint sets and such that for each integer at most of the smallest inputs are in and at most of the largest inputs are in . The sets and are an -halving. Following , a depth -halver can be constructed as follows. Take an vertex, degree bipartite expander with parts and of equal size such that every subset of vertices of size at most has at least neighbors. The vertices of the graph can be thought of as registers that contain inputs and the edges can be thought of as wires that compare the inputs of two registers. At the start, arbitrarily place half of the inputs in and half of the inputs in and decompose the edges into perfect matchings. The goal is to end with roughly containing the smaller half of the inputs and containing roughly the larger half of the inputs. To achieve this, sequentially process each matching by comparing the registers paired up by the edges of this matching and correct any inputs that are out of order. Specifically, for each edge of the matching, if the larger input is in the register in and the smaller input is in the register in , then swap the two inputs so that the smaller one is in and the larger one is in . It is clear that this process consists of parallel steps. After all rounds, take to be the set of inputs in registers in and to be the set of inputs in registers in to obtain an -halving. To see this, notice that if a register in and in are connected by an edge then after the matching with this edge is processed, the input in is less than that of . Furthermore, this property remains true throughout the rest of the process. Now, suppose for some that more than of the inputs are in . Then by expansion properties of the graph, the registers of these inputs in are connected with at least registers in . Altogether, this constitutes more than registers so there must be some register in connected to some register in such that the final input of is not in , while the final input of is. This violates the previous property however, and thus the output sets and must be an -halving.


See also

*
Algebraic connectivity The algebraic connectivity (also known as Fiedler value or Fiedler eigenvalue after Miroslav Fiedler) of a graph ' is the second-smallest eigenvalue (counting multiple eigenvalues separately) of the Laplacian matrix of '. This eigenvalue is great ...
*
Zig-zag product In graph theory, the zig-zag product of regular graphs G,H, denoted by G \circ H, is a Graph operations, binary operation which takes a large graph (G) and a small graph (H) and produces a graph that approximately inherits the size of the large ...
*
Superstrong approximation Superstrong approximation is a generalisation of strong approximation in algebraic groups ''G'', to provide spectral gap results. The spectrum in question is that of the Laplacian matrix associated to a family of quotients of a discrete group Γ; a ...
*
Spectral graph theory In mathematics, spectral graph theory is the study of the properties of a Graph (discrete mathematics), graph in relationship to the characteristic polynomial, eigenvalues, and eigenvectors of matrices associated with the graph, such as its adjacen ...


Notes

*


References


Textbooks and surveys

* * * * *


Research articles

* * * * . * . * . * * * *


Recent Applications

*


External links


Brief introduction in Notices of the American Mathematical Society

Introductory paper by Michael Nielsen
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160817025506/http://michaelnielsen.org/blog/archive/notes/expander_graphs.pdf , date=2016-08-17
Lecture notes from a course on expanders (by Nati Linial and Avi Wigderson)


* ttps://web.archive.org/web/20070523090323/http://www.yann-ollivier.org/specgraph/specgraph.html Definition and application of spectral gap Graph families