Singular Values Versus Expansion in Directed and Undirected Graphs
By: Jake Ruotolo, Salil Vadhan
Potential Business Impact:
Makes computer networks more efficient and reliable.
We relate the nontrivial singular values $\sigma_2,\ldots,\sigma_n$ of the normalized adjacency matrix of an Eulerian directed graph to combinatorial measures of graph expansion: \\ 1. We introduce a new directed analogue of conductance $\phi_{dir}$, and prove a Cheeger-like inequality showing that $\phi_{dir}$ is bounded away from 0 iff $\sigma_2$ is bounded away from 1. In undirected graphs, this can be viewed as a unification of the standard Cheeger Inequality and Trevisan's Cheeger Inequality for the smallest eigenvalue.\\ 2. We prove a singular-value analogue of the Higher-Order Cheeger Inequalities, giving a combinatorial characterization of when $\sigma_k$ is bounded away from 1. \\ 3. We tighten the relationship between $\sigma_2$ and vertex expansion, proving that if a $d$-regular graph $G$ with the property that all sets $S$ of size at most $n/2$ have at least $(1+\delta)\cdot |S|$ out-neighbors, then $1-\sigma_2=\Omega(\delta^2/d)$. This bound is tight and saves a factor of $d$ over the previously known relationship.
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