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The objective of this study is to examine the asymptotic behavior of Betti numbers of Čech complexes treated as stochastic processes and formed from random points in the d-dimensional Euclidean space
${\mathbb{R}}^d$
. We consider the case where the points of the Čech complex are generated by a Poisson process with intensity nf for a probability density f. We look at the cases where the behavior of the connectivity radius of the Čech complex causes simplices of dimension greater than
$k+1$
to vanish in probability, the so-called sparse regime, as well when the connectivity radius is of the order of
$n^{-1/d}$
, the critical regime. We establish limit theorems in the aforementioned regimes: central limit theorems for the sparse and critical regimes, and a Poisson limit theorem for the sparse regime. When the connectivity radius of the Čech complex is
$o(n^{-1/d})$
, i.e. the sparse regime, we can decompose the limiting processes into a time-changed Brownian motion or a time-changed homogeneous Poisson process respectively. In the critical regime, the limiting process is a centered Gaussian process but has a much more complicated representation, because the Čech complex becomes highly connected with many topological holes of any dimension.
The iterative division of a triangle by chords which join a randomly-selected vertex of a triangle to the opposite side is investigated. Results on the limiting random graph which eventuates are given. Aspects studied are: the order of vertices; the fragmentation of chords; age distributions for elements of the graph; various topological characterisations of the triangles. Different sampling protocols are explored. Extensive use is made of the theory of branching processes.
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