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Probabilistic constructions in continuous combinatorics and a bridge to distributed algorithms

17 February 2021
Anton Bernshteyn
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Abstract

The probabilistic method is a technique for proving combinatorial existence results by means of showing that a randomly chosen object has the desired properties with positive probability. A particularly powerful probabilistic tool is the Lov\'{a}sz Local Lemma (the LLL for short), which was introduced by Erd\H{o}s and Lov\'{a}sz in the mid-1970s. Here we develop a version of the LLL that can be used to prove the existence of continuous colorings. We then give several applications in Borel and topological dynamics. * Seward and Tucker-Drob showed that every free Borel action Γ↷X\Gamma \curvearrowright XΓ↷X of a countable group Γ\GammaΓ admits an equivariant Borel map π ⁣:X→Y\pi \colon X \to Yπ:X→Y to a free subshift Y⊂2ΓY \subset 2^\GammaY⊂2Γ. We give a new simple proof of this result. * We show that for a countable group Γ\GammaΓ, Free(2Γ)\mathrm{Free}(2^\Gamma)Free(2Γ) is weakly contained, in the sense of Elek, in every free continuous action of Γ\GammaΓ on a zero-dimensional Polish space. This fact is analogous to the theorem of Ab\'{e}rt and Weiss for probability measure-preserving actions and has a number of consequences in continuous combinatorics. In particular, we deduce that a coloring problem admits a continuous solution on Free(2Γ)\mathrm{Free}(2^\Gamma)Free(2Γ) if and only if it can be solved on finite subgraphs of the Cayley graph of Γ\GammaΓ by an efficient deterministic distributed algorithm (this fact was also proved independently and using different methods by Seward). This establishes a formal correspondence between questions that have been studied independently in continuous combinatorics and in distributed computing.

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