193,521 research outputs found

    Completing Partial Packings of Bipartite Graphs

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    Given a bipartite graph HH and an integer nn, let f(n;H)f(n;H) be the smallest integer such that, any set of edge disjoint copies of HH on nn vertices, can be extended to an HH-design on at most n+f(n;H)n+f(n;H) vertices. We establish tight bounds for the growth of f(n;H)f(n;H) as n→∞n \rightarrow \infty. In particular, we prove the conjecture of F\"uredi and Lehel \cite{FuLe} that f(n;H)=o(n)f(n;H) = o(n). This settles a long-standing open problem

    Walking Through Waypoints

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    We initiate the study of a fundamental combinatorial problem: Given a capacitated graph G=(V,E)G=(V,E), find a shortest walk ("route") from a source s∈Vs\in V to a destination t∈Vt\in V that includes all vertices specified by a set W⊆V\mathscr{W}\subseteq V: the \emph{waypoints}. This waypoint routing problem finds immediate applications in the context of modern networked distributed systems. Our main contribution is an exact polynomial-time algorithm for graphs of bounded treewidth. We also show that if the number of waypoints is logarithmically bounded, exact polynomial-time algorithms exist even for general graphs. Our two algorithms provide an almost complete characterization of what can be solved exactly in polynomial-time: we show that more general problems (e.g., on grid graphs of maximum degree 3, with slightly more waypoints) are computationally intractable

    Homotopy Type of the Boolean Complex of a Coxeter System

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    In any Coxeter group, the set of elements whose principal order ideals are boolean forms a simplicial poset under the Bruhat order. This simplicial poset defines a cell complex, called the boolean complex. In this paper it is shown that, for any Coxeter system of rank n, the boolean complex is homotopy equivalent to a wedge of (n-1)-dimensional spheres. The number of such spheres can be computed recursively from the unlabeled Coxeter graph, and defines a new graph invariant called the boolean number. Specific calculations of the boolean number are given for all finite and affine irreducible Coxeter systems, as well as for systems with graphs that are disconnected, complete, or stars. One implication of these results is that the boolean complex is contractible if and only if a generator of the Coxeter system is in the center of the group. of these results is that the boolean complex is contractible if and only if a generator of the Coxeter system is in the center of the group.Comment: final version, to appear in Advances in Mathematic

    Symplectic Techniques for Semiclassical Completely Integrable Systems

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    This article is a survey of classical and quantum completely integrable systems from the viewpoint of local ``phase space'' analysis. It advocates the use of normal forms and shows how to get global information from glueing local pieces. Many crucial phenomena such as monodromy or eigenvalue concentration are shown to arise from the presence of non-degenerate critical points.Comment: 32 pages, 7 figures. Review articl
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