Morse theory for discrete magnetic operators and nodal count distribution for graphs

被引:1
|
作者
Alon, Lior [1 ]
Goresky, Mark [2 ]
机构
[1] MIT, Dept Math, Simons Bldg Bldg 2,77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] Inst Adv Study, Sch Math, 1 Einstein Dr, Princeton, NJ 08540 USA
关键词
Magnetic operators; spectral graph theory; nodal count; Morse theory; CONDUCTION ELECTRONS; MOTION;
D O I
10.4171/JST/468
中图分类号
O29 [应用数学];
学科分类号
070104 ;
摘要
Given a discrete Schrodinger operator h on a finite connected graph G of n vertices, the nodal count 0(h, k) denotes the number of edges on which the k-th eigenvector changes sign. A signing h0 of h is any real symmetric matrix constructed by changing the sign of some off-diagonal entries of h, and its nodal count is defined according to the signing. The set of signings of h lie in a naturally defined torus Th of "magnetic perturbations" of h. G. Berkolaiko [Anal. PDE 6 (2013), 1213-1233] discovered that every signing h0 of h is a critical point of every eigenvalue Ak:Th R, with Morse index equal to the nodal surplus. We add further Morse theoretic information to this result. We show if h E Th is a critical point of Ak and the eigenvector vanishes at a single vertex v of degree d, then the critical point lies in a nondegenerate critical submanifold of dimension d + n - 4, closely related to the configuration space of a planar linkage. We compute its Morse index in terms of spectral data. The average nodal surplus distribution is the distribution of values of 0(h0, k) - (k - 1), averaged over all signings h0 of h. If all critical points correspond to simple eigenvalues with nowhere-vanishing eigenvectors, then the average nodal surplus distribution is binomial. In general, we conjecture that the nodal surplus distribution converges to a Gaussian in a CLT fashion as the first Betti number of G goes to infinity.
引用
收藏
页码:1225 / 1260
页数:36
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Discrete Morse theory and localization
    Nanda, Vidit
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PURE AND APPLIED ALGEBRA, 2019, 223 (02) : 459 - 488
  • [22] Discrete Morse theory on digraphs
    Lin, Yong
    Wang, Chong
    Yau, Shing-Tung
    [J]. PURE AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS QUARTERLY, 2021, 17 (05) : 1711 - 1737
  • [23] The number of excellent discrete Morse functions on graphs
    Ayala, R.
    Fernandez-Ternero, D.
    Vilches, J. A.
    [J]. DISCRETE APPLIED MATHEMATICS, 2011, 159 (16) : 1676 - 1688
  • [24] Morse theory, graphs, and string topology
    Cohen, RL
    [J]. Morse Theoretic Methods in Nonlinear Analysis and in Symplectic Topology, 2006, 217 : 149 - 184
  • [25] A zero truncated discrete distribution: Theory and applications to count data
    Department, Tassaddaq Hussain
    [J]. PAKISTAN JOURNAL OF STATISTICS AND OPERATION RESEARCH, 2020, 16 (01) : 167 - 190
  • [26] Parameterized Complexity of Discrete Morse Theory
    Burton, Benjamin A.
    Lewiner, Thomas
    Paixao, Joao
    Spreer, Jonathan
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE TWENTY-NINETH ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTATIONAL GEOMETRY (SOCG'13), 2013, : 127 - 136
  • [27] Discrete Morse Theory for the Barycentric Subdivision
    Zhukova A.
    [J]. Journal of Mathematical Sciences, 2018, 232 (2) : 129 - 137
  • [28] Combinatorial topology and discrete Morse theory
    Blanchet, C
    Gallais, E
    [J]. Differential Geometry and Topology, Discrete and Computational Geometry, 2005, 197 : 31 - 72
  • [29] DISCRETE MORSE THEORY FOR MANIFOLDS WITH BOUNDARY
    Benedetti, Bruno
    [J]. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY, 2012, 364 (12) : 6631 - 6670
  • [30] Discrete Morse theory and classifying spaces
    Nanda, Vidit
    Tamaki, Dai
    Tanaka, Kohei
    [J]. ADVANCES IN MATHEMATICS, 2018, 340 : 723 - 790