269 research outputs found
Colourings of cubic graphs inducing isomorphic monochromatic subgraphs
A -bisection of a bridgeless cubic graph is a -colouring of its
vertex set such that the colour classes have the same cardinality and all
connected components in the two subgraphs induced by the colour classes
(monochromatic components in what follows) have order at most . Ban and
Linial conjectured that every bridgeless cubic graph admits a -bisection
except for the Petersen graph. A similar problem for the edge set of cubic
graphs has been studied: Wormald conjectured that every cubic graph with
has a -edge colouring such that the two
monochromatic subgraphs are isomorphic linear forests (i.e. a forest whose
components are paths). Finally, Ando conjectured that every cubic graph admits
a bisection such that the two induced monochromatic subgraphs are isomorphic.
In this paper, we give a detailed insight into the conjectures of Ban-Linial
and Wormald and provide evidence of a strong relation of both of them with
Ando's conjecture. Furthermore, we also give computational and theoretical
evidence in their support. As a result, we pose some open problems stronger
than the above mentioned conjectures. Moreover, we prove Ban-Linial's
conjecture for cubic cycle permutation graphs.
As a by-product of studying -edge colourings of cubic graphs having linear
forests as monochromatic components, we also give a negative answer to a
problem posed by Jackson and Wormald about certain decompositions of cubic
graphs into linear forests.Comment: 33 pages; submitted for publicatio
On flows of graphs
Tutte\u27s 3-flow Conjecture, 4-flow Conjecture, and 5-flow Conjecture are among the most fascinating problems in graph theory. In this dissertation, we mainly focus on the nowhere-zero integer flow of graphs, the circular flow of graphs and the bidirected flow of graphs. We confirm Tutte\u27s 3-flow Conjecture for the family of squares of graphs and the family of triangularly connected graphs. In fact, we obtain much stronger results on this conjecture in terms of group connectivity and get the complete characterization of such graphs in those families which do not admit nowhere-zero 3-flows. For the circular flows of graphs, we establish some sufficient conditions for a graph to have circular flow index less than 4, which generalizes a new known result to a large family of graphs. For the Bidirected Flow Conjecture, we prove it to be true for 6-edge connected graphs
Smallest snarks with oddness 4 and cyclic connectivity 4 have order 44
The family of snarks -- connected bridgeless cubic graphs that cannot be
3-edge-coloured -- is well-known as a potential source of counterexamples to
several important and long-standing conjectures in graph theory. These include
the cycle double cover conjecture, Tutte's 5-flow conjecture, Fulkerson's
conjecture, and several others. One way of approaching these conjectures is
through the study of structural properties of snarks and construction of small
examples with given properties. In this paper we deal with the problem of
determining the smallest order of a nontrivial snark (that is, one which is
cyclically 4-edge-connected and has girth at least 5) of oddness at least 4.
Using a combination of structural analysis with extensive computations we prove
that the smallest order of a snark with oddness at least 4 and cyclic
connectivity 4 is 44. Formerly it was known that such a snark must have at
least 38 vertices [J. Combin. Theory Ser. B 103 (2013), 468--488] and one such
snark on 44 vertices was constructed by Lukot'ka et al. [Electron. J. Combin.
22 (2015), #P1.51]. The proof requires determining all cyclically
4-edge-connected snarks on 36 vertices, which extends the previously compiled
list of all such snarks up to 34 vertices [J. Combin. Theory Ser. B, loc.
cit.]. As a by-product, we use this new list to test the validity of several
conjectures where snarks can be smallest counterexamples.Comment: 21 page
Single Source - All Sinks Max Flows in Planar Digraphs
Let G = (V,E) be a planar n-vertex digraph. Consider the problem of computing
max st-flow values in G from a fixed source s to all sinks t in V\{s}. We show
how to solve this problem in near-linear O(n log^3 n) time. Previously, no
better solution was known than running a single-source single-sink max flow
algorithm n-1 times, giving a total time bound of O(n^2 log n) with the
algorithm of Borradaile and Klein.
An important implication is that all-pairs max st-flow values in G can be
computed in near-quadratic time. This is close to optimal as the output size is
Theta(n^2). We give a quadratic lower bound on the number of distinct max flow
values and an Omega(n^3) lower bound for the total size of all min cut-sets.
This distinguishes the problem from the undirected case where the number of
distinct max flow values is O(n).
Previous to our result, no algorithm which could solve the all-pairs max flow
values problem faster than the time of Theta(n^2) max-flow computations for
every planar digraph was known.
This result is accompanied with a data structure that reports min cut-sets.
For fixed s and all t, after O(n^{3/2} log^{3/2} n) preprocessing time, it can
report the set of arcs C crossing a min st-cut in time roughly proportional to
the size of C.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures; extended abstract appeared in FOCS 201
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