Bhat, U.,Krapivsky, P. L.,Lambiotte, R.,Redner, S.

We introduce a growing network model, the copying model, in which a newnode attaches to a randomly selected target node and, in addition, independently to each of the neighbors of the target with copying probability p. When p < 1/2, this algorithm generates sparse networks, in which the average node degree is finite. A power-law degree distribution also arises, with a nonuniversal exponent whose value is determined by a transcendental equation in p. In the sparse regime, the network is "normal," e. g., the relative fluctuations in the number of links are asymptotically negligible. For p >= 1/2, the emergent networks are dense (the average degree increases with the number of nodes N), and they exhibit intriguing structural behaviors. In particular, the N dependence of the number of m cliques (complete subgraphs of m nodes) undergoes m -1 transitions from normal to progressively more anomalous behavior at an m-dependent critical values of p. Different realizations of the network, which start from the same initial state, exhibit macroscopic fluctuations in the thermodynamic limit: absence of self-averaging. When linking to second neighbors of the target node can occur, the number of links asymptotically grows as N-2 as N ->infinity, so that the network is effectively complete as N ->infinity.