20 November 2012
Ex Boccherini - Piazza S. Ponziano 6 (Conference Room )
Network science have been focused on the properties of a single isolated network that does not interact or depends on other networks. In reality, many real-networks, such as
power grid, transportation and communication infrastructures interact and depend on each other. I will present a framework for studying interacting networks. In interdependent networks, when nodes in one network fail, they cause dependent nodes in other networks to also fail. This may happen recursively and can lead to a cascade of failures and to a sudden fragmentation of the system.
I will present analytical solutions for the critical threshold
and the giant component of a network of n interdependent networks.
I will show, that the general theory has many novel features
that are not present in classical network theory. For example,
while a failure of a fraction of nodes in a single network can lead only to small damage to the system, in interacting network it can lead to a sudden (discontinuous) collapse due to cascading failures.
We also show that interdependent networks embedded in space are
significantly more vulnerable compared to random networks.
relatore:
Havlin, Shlomo - Bar-Ilan University - Ramat-Gan
Units:
AXES