2,533 research outputs found

    Aspects of graph vulnerability.

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    Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, 1994.This dissertation details the results of an investigation into, primarily, three aspects of graph vulnerability namely, l-connectivity, Steiner Distance hereditatiness and functional isolation. Following the introduction in Chapter one, Chapter two focusses on the l-connectivity of graphs and introduces the concept of the strong l-connectivity of digraphs. Bounds on this latter parameter are investigated and then the l-connectivity function of particular types of graphs, namely caterpillars and complete multipartite graphs as well as the strong l-connectivity function of digraphs, is explored. The chapter concludes with an examination of extremal graphs with a given l-connectivity. Chapter three investigates Steiner distance hereditary graphs. It is shown that if G is 2-Steiner distance hereditary, then G is k-Steiner distance hereditary for all k≥2. Further, it is shown that if G is k-Steiner distance hereditary (k≥ 3), then G need not be (k - l)-Steiner distance hereditary. An efficient algorithm for determining the Steiner distance of a set of k vertices in a k-Steiner distance hereditary graph is discussed and a characterization of 2-Steiner distance hereditary graphs is given which leads to an efficient algorithm for testing whether a graph is 2-Steiner distance hereditary. Some general properties about the cycle structure of k-Steiner distance hereditary graphs are established and are then used to characterize 3-Steiner distance hereditary graphs. Chapter four contains an investigation of functional isolation sequences of supply graphs. The concept of the Ranked supply graph is introduced and both necessary and sufficient conditions for a sequence of positive nondecreasing integers to be a functional isolation sequence of a ranked supply graph are determined

    Notes on the connectivity of Cayley coset digraphs

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    Hamidoune's connectivity results for hierarchical Cayley digraphs are extended to Cayley coset digraphs and thus to arbitrary vertex transitive digraphs. It is shown that if a Cayley coset digraph can be hierarchically decomposed in a certain way, then it is optimally vertex connected. The results are obtained by extending the methods used by Hamidoune. They are used to show that cycle-prefix graphs are optimally vertex connected. This implies that cycle-prefix graphs have good fault tolerance properties.Comment: 15 page

    Sizing the length of complex networks

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    Among all characteristics exhibited by natural and man-made networks the small-world phenomenon is surely the most relevant and popular. But despite its significance, a reliable and comparable quantification of the question `how small is a small-world network and how does it compare to others' has remained a difficult challenge to answer. Here we establish a new synoptic representation that allows for a complete and accurate interpretation of the pathlength (and efficiency) of complex networks. We frame every network individually, based on how its length deviates from the shortest and the longest values it could possibly take. For that, we first had to uncover the upper and the lower limits for the pathlength and efficiency, which indeed depend on the specific number of nodes and links. These limits are given by families of singular configurations that we name as ultra-short and ultra-long networks. The representation here introduced frees network comparison from the need to rely on the choice of reference graph models (e.g., random graphs and ring lattices), a common practice that is prone to yield biased interpretations as we show. Application to empirical examples of three categories (neural, social and transportation) evidences that, while most real networks display a pathlength comparable to that of random graphs, when contrasted against the absolute boundaries, only the cortical connectomes prove to be ultra-short

    Subdegree growth rates of infinite primitive permutation groups

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    A transitive group GG of permutations of a set Ω\Omega is primitive if the only GG-invariant equivalence relations on Ω\Omega are the trivial and universal relations. If α∈Ω\alpha \in \Omega, then the orbits of the stabiliser GαG_\alpha on Ω\Omega are called the α\alpha-suborbits of GG; when GG acts transitively the cardinalities of these α\alpha-suborbits are the subdegrees of GG. If GG acts primitively on an infinite set Ω\Omega, and all the suborbits of GG are finite, Adeleke and Neumann asked if, after enumerating the subdegrees of GG as a non-decreasing sequence 1=m0≤m1≤...1 = m_0 \leq m_1 \leq ..., the subdegree growth rates of infinite primitive groups that act distance-transitively on locally finite distance-transitive graphs are extremal, and conjecture there might exist a number cc which perhaps depends upon GG, perhaps only on mm, such that mr≤c(m−2)r−1m_r \leq c(m-2)^{r-1}. In this paper it is shown that such an enumeration is not desirable, as there exist infinite primitive permutation groups possessing no infinite subdegree, in which two distinct subdegrees are each equal to the cardinality of infinitely many suborbits. The examples used to show this provide several novel methods for constructing infinite primitive graphs. A revised enumeration method is then proposed, and it is shown that, under this, Adeleke and Neumann's question may be answered, at least for groups exhibiting suitable rates of growth.Comment: 41 page
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