86 research outputs found
Claw -free graphs and line graphs
The research of my dissertation is motivated by the conjecture of Thomassen that every 4-connected line graph is hamiltonian and by the conjecture of Tutte that every 4-edge-connected graph has a no-where-zero 3-flow. Towards the hamiltonian line graph problem, we proved that every 3-connected N2-locally connected claw-free graph is hamiltonian, which was conjectured by Ryjacek in 1990; that every 4-connected line graph of an almost claw free graph is hamiltonian connected, and that every triangularly connected claw-free graph G with |E( G)| ≥ 3 is vertex pancyclic. Towards the second conjecture, we proved that every line graph of a 4-edge-connected graph is Z 3-connected
Circumference of 3-connected claw-free graphs and large Eulerian subgraphs of 3-edge-connected graphs
AbstractThe circumference of a graph is the length of its longest cycles. Results of Jackson, and Jackson and Wormald, imply that the circumference of a 3-connected cubic n-vertex graph is Ω(n0.694), and the circumference of a 3-connected claw-free graph is Ω(n0.121). We generalize and improve the first result by showing that every 3-edge-connected graph with m edges has an Eulerian subgraph with Ω(m0.753) edges. We use this result together with the Ryjáček closure operation to improve the lower bound on the circumference of a 3-connected claw-free graph to Ω(n0.753). Our proofs imply polynomial time algorithms for finding large Eulerian subgraphs of 3-edge-connected graphs and long cycles in 3-connected claw-free graphs
Eulerian subgraphs and Hamiltonicity of claw -free graphs
Let C(l, k) denote the class of 2-edge-connected graphs of order n such that a graph G ∈ C(l, k) if and only if for every edge cut S ⊆ E(G) with |S| ≤ 3, each component of G - S has order at least n-kl . We prove that If G ∈ C(6, 0), then G is supereulerian if and only if G cannot be contracted to K2,3, K 2,5 or K2,3(e), where e ∈ E(K2,3) and K2,3(e) stands for a graph obtained from K2,3 by replacing e by a path of length 2. Previous results by Catlin and Li, and by Broersma and Xiong are extended.;We also investigate the supereulerian graph problems within planar graphs, and we prove that if a 2-edge-connected planar graph G is at most three edges short of having two edge-disjoint spanning trees, then G is supereulerian except a few classes of graphs. This is applied to show the existence of spanning Eulerian subgraphs in planar graphs with small edge cut conditions. We determine several extremal bounds for planar graphs to be supereulerian.;Kuipers and Veldman conjectured that any 3-connected claw-free graph with order n and minimum degree delta ≥ n+610 is Hamiltonian for n sufficiently large. We prove that if H is a 3-connected claw-free graph with sufficiently large order n, and if delta(H) ≥ n+510 , then either H is hamiltonian, or delta( H) = n+510 and the Ryjac˘ek\u27s closure cl( H) of H is the line graph of a graph obtained from the Petersen graph P10 by adding n-1510 pendant edges at each vertex of P10
Exploiting structure to cope with NP-hard graph problems: Polynomial and exponential time exact algorithms
An ideal algorithm for solving a particular problem always finds an optimal solution, finds such a solution for every possible instance, and finds it in polynomial time. When dealing with NP-hard problems, algorithms can only be expected to possess at most two out of these three desirable properties. All algorithms presented in this thesis are exact algorithms, which means that they always find an optimal solution. Demanding the solution to be optimal means that other concessions have to be made when designing an exact algorithm for an NP-hard problem: we either have to impose restrictions on the instances of the problem in order to achieve a polynomial time complexity, or we have to abandon the requirement that the worst-case running time has to be polynomial. In some cases, when the problem under consideration remains NP-hard on restricted input, we are even forced to do both.
Most of the problems studied in this thesis deal with partitioning the vertex set of a given graph. In the other problems the task is to find certain types of paths and cycles in graphs. The problems all have in common that they are NP-hard on general graphs. We present several polynomial time algorithms for solving restrictions of these problems to specific graph classes, in particular graphs without long induced paths, chordal graphs and claw-free graphs. For problems that remain NP-hard even on restricted input we present exact exponential time algorithms. In the design of each of our algorithms, structural graph properties have been heavily exploited. Apart from using existing structural results, we prove new structural properties of certain types of graphs in order to obtain our algorithmic results
On Eulerian subgraphs and hamiltonian line graphs
A graph {\color{black}} is Hamilton-connected if for any pair of distinct vertices {\color{black}}, {\color{black}} has a spanning -path; {\color{black}} is 1-hamiltonian if for any vertex subset with , has a spanning cycle. Let , and denote the minimum degree, the matching number and the line graph of a graph , respectively. The following result is obtained. {\color{black} Let be a simple graph} with . If , then each of the following holds. \\ (i) is Hamilton-connected if and only if . \\ (ii) is 1-hamiltonian if and only if . %==========sp For a graph , an integer and distinct vertices , an -path-system of is a subgraph consisting of internally disjoint -paths. The spanning connectivity is the largest integer such that for any with and for any with , has a spanning -path-system. It is known that , and determining if is an NP-complete problem. A graph is maximally spanning connected if . Let and be the smallest integers and such that is maximally spanning connected and , respectively. We show that every locally-connected line graph with connectivity at least 3 is maximally spanning connected, and that the spanning connectivity of a locally-connected line graph can be polynomially determined. As applications, we also determined best possible upper bounds for and , and characterized the extremal graphs reaching the upper bounds. %==============st For integers and , a graph is -supereulerian if for any disjoint edge sets with and , has a spanning closed trail that contains and avoids . Pulleyblank in [J. Graph Theory, 3 (1979) 309-310] showed that determining whether a graph is -supereulerian, even when restricted to planar graphs, is NP-complete. Settling an open problem of Bauer, Catlin in [J. Graph Theory, 12 (1988) 29-45] showed that every simple graph on vertices with , when is sufficiently large, is -supereulerian or is contractible to . We prove the following for any nonnegative integers and . \\ (i) For any real numbers and with , there exists a family of finitely many graphs \F(a,b;s,t) such that if is a simple graph on vertices with and , then either is -supereulerian, or is contractible to a member in \F(a,b;s,t). \\ (ii) Let denote the connected loopless graph with two vertices and parallel edges. If is a simple graph on vertices with and , then when is sufficiently large, either is -supereulerian, or for some integer with , is contractible to a . %==================index For a hamiltonian property \cp, Clark and Wormold introduced the problem of investigating the value \cp(a,b) = \max\{\min\{n: L^n(G) has property \cp\}: and , and proposed a few problems to determine \cp(a,b) with when \cp is being hamiltonian, edge-hamiltonian and hamiltonian-connected. Zhan in 1986 proved that the line graph of a 4-edge-connected graph is Hamilton-connected, which implies a solution to the unsettled cases of above-mentioned problem. We consider an extended version of the problem. Let denote the essential edge-connectivity of a graph , and define \cp\u27(a,b) = \max\{\min\{n: L^n(G) has property \cp\}: and . We investigate the values of \cp\u27(a,b) when \cp is one of these hamiltonian properties. In particular, we show that for any values of , \cp\u27(4,b) \le 2 and \cp\u27(4,b) = 1 if and only if Thomassen\u27s conjecture that every 4-connected line graph is hamiltonian is valid
Supereulerian Properties in Graphs and Hamiltonian Properties in Line Graphs
Following the trend initiated by Chvatal and Erdos, using the relation of independence number and connectivity as sufficient conditions for hamiltonicity of graphs, we characterize supereulerian graphs with small matching number, which implies a characterization of hamiltonian claw-free graph with small independence number.;We also investigate strongly spanning trailable graphs and their applications to hamiltonian connected line graphs characterizations for small strongly spanning trailable graphs and strongly spanning trailable graphs with short longest cycles are obtained. In particular, we have found a graph family F of reduced nonsupereulerian graphs such that for any graph G with kappa\u27(G) ≥ 2 and alpha\u27( G) ≤ 3, G is supereulerian if and only if the reduction of G is not in F..;We proved that any connected graph G with at most 12 vertices, at most one vertex of degree 2 and without vertices of degree 1 is either supereulerian or its reduction is one of six exceptional cases. This is applied to show that if a 3-edge-connected graph has the property that every pair of edges is joined by a longest path of length at most 8, then G is strongly spanning trailable if and only if G is not the wagner graph.;Using charge and discharge method, we prove that every 3-connected, essentially 10-connected line graph is hamiltonian connected. We also provide a unified treatment with short proofs for several former results by Fujisawa and Ota in [20], by Kaiser et al in [24], and by Pfender in [40]. New sufficient conditions for hamiltonian claw-free graphs are also obtained
Nested locally Hamiltonian graphs and the Oberly-Sumner conjecture
Please read abstract in the article.The DST-NRF Centre of Excellence in Mathematical and Statistical Sciences (CoE-MaSS) and the National Research Foundation of S.A.https://www.dmgt.uz.zgora.plam2023Mathematics and Applied Mathematic
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