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    Caterpillars have antimagic orientations

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    An antimagic labeling of a directed graph D with m arcs is a bijection from the set of arcs of D to {1, . . . , m} such that all oriented vertex sums of vertices in D are pairwise distinct, where the oriented vertex sum of a vertex u is the sum of labels of all arcs entering u minus the sum of labels of all arcs leaving u. Hefetz, Mütze, and Schwartz [3] conjectured that every connected graph admits an antimagic orientation, where an antimagic orientation of a graph G is an orientation of G which has an antimagic labeling. We use a constructive technique to prove that caterpillars, a well-known subclass of trees, have antimagic orientations.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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