Given $n$-vertex simple graphs $X$ and $Y$, the friends-and-strangers graph $\mathsf{FS}(X, Y)$ has as its vertices all $n!$ bijections from $V(X)$ to $V(Y)$, where two bijections are adjacent if and only if they differ on two adjacent elements of $V(X)$ whose mappings are adjacent in $Y$. We consider the setting where $X$ and $Y$ are both edge-subgraphs of $K_{r,r}$: due to a parity obstruction, $\mathsf{FS}(X,Y)$ is always disconnected in this setting. Modestly improving a result of Bangachev, we show that if $X$ and $Y$ respectively have minimum degrees $\delta(X)$ and $\delta(Y)$ and they satisfy $\delta(X) + \delta(Y) \geq \lfloor 3r/2 \rfloor + 1$, then $\mathsf{FS}(X,Y)$ has exactly two connected components. This proves that the cutoff for $\mathsf{FS}(X,Y)$ to avoid isolated vertices is equal to the cutoff for $\mathsf{FS}(X,Y)$ to have exactly two connected components. We also consider a probabilistic setup in which we fix $Y$ to be $K_{r,r}$, but randomly generate $X$ by including each edge in $K_{r,r}$ independently with probability $p$. Invoking a result of Zhu, we exhibit a phase transition phenomenon with threshold function $(\log r)/r$: below the threshold, $\mathsf{FS}(X,Y)$ has more than two connected components with high probability, while above the threshold, $\mathsf{FS}(X,Y)$ has exactly two connected components with high probability. Altogether, our results settle a conjecture and completely answer two problems of Alon, Defant, and Kravitz.
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