3,042 research outputs found
Acyclic orientations with path constraints
Many well-known combinatorial optimization problems can be stated over the
set of acyclic orientations of an undirected graph. For example, acyclic
orientations with certain diameter constraints are closely related to the
optimal solutions of the vertex coloring and frequency assignment problems. In
this paper we introduce a linear programming formulation of acyclic
orientations with path constraints, and discuss its use in the solution of the
vertex coloring problem and some versions of the frequency assignment problem.
A study of the polytope associated with the formulation is presented, including
proofs of which constraints of the formulation are facet-defining and the
introduction of new classes of valid inequalities
Semi-Transitive Orientations and Word-Representable Graphs
A graph is a \emph{word-representable graph} if there exists a word
over the alphabet such that letters and alternate in if and
only if for each .
In this paper we give an effective characterization of word-representable
graphs in terms of orientations. Namely, we show that a graph is
word-representable if and only if it admits a \emph{semi-transitive
orientation} defined in the paper. This allows us to prove a number of results
about word-representable graphs, in particular showing that the recognition
problem is in NP, and that word-representable graphs include all 3-colorable
graphs.
We also explore bounds on the size of the word representing the graph. The
representation number of is the minimum such that is a
representable by a word, where each letter occurs times; such a exists
for any word-representable graph. We show that the representation number of a
word-representable graph on vertices is at most , while there exist
graphs for which it is .Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:0810.031
Enumerating Cyclic Orientations of a Graph
Acyclic and cyclic orientations of an undirected graph have been widely
studied for their importance: an orientation is acyclic if it assigns a
direction to each edge so as to obtain a directed acyclic graph (DAG) with the
same vertex set; it is cyclic otherwise. As far as we know, only the
enumeration of acyclic orientations has been addressed in the literature. In
this paper, we pose the problem of efficiently enumerating all the
\emph{cyclic} orientations of an undirected connected graph with vertices
and edges, observing that it cannot be solved using algorithmic techniques
previously employed for enumerating acyclic orientations.We show that the
problem is of independent interest from both combinatorial and algorithmic
points of view, and that each cyclic orientation can be listed with
delay time. Space usage is with an additional setup cost
of time before the enumeration begins, or with a setup cost of
time
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