3,368 research outputs found
Resolving sets for Johnson and Kneser graphs
A set of vertices in a graph is a {\em resolving set} for if, for
any two vertices , there exists such that the distances . In this paper, we consider the Johnson graphs and Kneser
graphs , and obtain various constructions of resolving sets for these
graphs. As well as general constructions, we show that various interesting
combinatorial objects can be used to obtain resolving sets in these graphs,
including (for Johnson graphs) projective planes and symmetric designs, as well
as (for Kneser graphs) partial geometries, Hadamard matrices, Steiner systems
and toroidal grids.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Uniform hypergraphs containing no grids
A hypergraph is called an rĂr grid if it is isomorphic to a pattern of r horizontal and r vertical lines, i.e.,a family of sets {A1, ..., Ar, B1, ..., Br} such that AiâŠAj=BiâŠBj=Ď for 1â¤i<jâ¤r and {pipe}AiâŠBj{pipe}=1 for 1â¤i, jâ¤r. Three sets C1, C2, C3 form a triangle if they pairwise intersect in three distinct singletons, {pipe}C1âŠC2{pipe}={pipe}C2âŠC3{pipe}={pipe}C3âŠC1{pipe}=1, C1âŠC2â C1âŠC3. A hypergraph is linear, if {pipe}EâŠF{pipe}â¤1 holds for every pair of edges Eâ F.In this paper we construct large linear r-hypergraphs which contain no grids. Moreover, a similar construction gives large linear r-hypergraphs which contain neither grids nor triangles. For râĽ. 4 our constructions are almost optimal. These investigations are motivated by coding theory: we get new bounds for optimal superimposed codes and designs. Š 2013 Elsevier Ltd
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