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In this paper we establish the necessary and sufficient criterion for the contact process on Galton–Watson trees (resp. , random graphs) to exhibit the phase of extinction (resp. , short survival). We prove that the survival threshold ₁ for a Galton–Watson tree is strictly positive if and only if its offspring distribution has an exponential tail, that is, Ee^c0, settling a conjecture by Huang and Durrett (2018). On the random graph with degree distribution, we show that if has an exponential tail, then for small enough the contact process with the all-infected initial condition survives for n^1+o (1) -time whp (short survival), while for large enough it runs over e^ (n) -time whp (long survival). When is subexponential, we prove that the contact process whp displays long survival for any fixed >0.
Bhamidi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.