164 research outputs found
Forbidden subgraphs that imply Hamiltonian-connectedness
It is proven that if is a -connected claw-free graph which is also -free (where is a triangle with a path of length attached), -free (where is a path with vertices) or -free (where consists of two disjoint triangles connected by an edge), then is Hamiltonian-connected. Also, examples will be described that determine a finite family of graphs such that if a 3-connected graph being claw-free and -free implies is Hamiltonian-connected, then . \u
Some local--global phenomena in locally finite graphs
In this paper we present some results for a connected infinite graph with
finite degrees where the properties of balls of small radii guarantee the
existence of some Hamiltonian and connectivity properties of . (For a vertex
of a graph the ball of radius centered at is the subgraph of
induced by the set of vertices whose distance from does not
exceed ). In particular, we prove that if every ball of radius 2 in is
2-connected and satisfies the condition for
each path in , where and are non-adjacent vertices, then
has a Hamiltonian curve, introduced by K\"undgen, Li and Thomassen (2017).
Furthermore, we prove that if every ball of radius 1 in satisfies Ore's
condition (1960) then all balls of any radius in are Hamiltonian.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures; journal accepted versio
On some intriguing problems in Hamiltonian graph theory -- A survey
We survey results and open problems in Hamiltonian graph theory centred around three themes: regular graphs, -tough graphs, and claw-free graphs
Hamilton cycles in 5-connected line graphs
A conjecture of Carsten Thomassen states that every 4-connected line graph is
hamiltonian. It is known that the conjecture is true for 7-connected line
graphs. We improve this by showing that any 5-connected line graph of minimum
degree at least 6 is hamiltonian. The result extends to claw-free graphs and to
Hamilton-connectedness
On factors of 4-connected claw-free graphs
We consider the existence of several different kinds of factors in 4-connected claw-free graphs. This is motivated by the following two conjectures which are in fact equivalent by a recent result of the third author. Conjecture 1 (Thomassen): Every 4-connected line graph is Hamiltonian, i.e. has a connected 2-factor. Conjecture 2 (Matthews and Sumner): Every 4-connected claw-free graph is hamiltonian. We first show that Conjecture 2 is true within the class of hourglass-free graphs, i.e. graphs that do not contain an induced subgraph isomorphic to two triangles meeting in exactly one vertex. Next we show that a weaker form of Conjecture 2 is true, in which the conclusion is replaced by the conclusion that there exists a connected spanning subgraph in which each vertex has degree two or four. Finally we show that Conjecture 1 and 2 are equivalent to seemingly weaker conjectures in which the conclusion is replaced by the conclusion that there exists a spanning subgraph consisting of a bounded number of paths. \u
Heavy subgraphs, stability and hamiltonicity
Let be a graph. Adopting the terminology of Broersma et al. and \v{C}ada,
respectively, we say that is 2-heavy if every induced claw () of
contains two end-vertices each one has degree at least ; and
is o-heavy if every induced claw of contains two end-vertices with degree
sum at least in . In this paper, we introduce a new concept, and
say that is \emph{-c-heavy} if for a given graph and every induced
subgraph of isomorphic to and every maximal clique of ,
every non-trivial component of contains a vertex of degree at least
in . In terms of this concept, our original motivation that a
theorem of Hu in 1999 can be stated as every 2-connected 2-heavy and
-c-heavy graph is hamiltonian, where is the graph obtained from a
triangle by adding three disjoint pendant edges. In this paper, we will
characterize all connected graphs such that every 2-connected o-heavy and
-c-heavy graph is hamiltonian. Our work results in a different proof of a
stronger version of Hu's theorem. Furthermore, our main result improves or
extends several previous results.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, finial version for publication in Discussiones
Mathematicae Graph Theor
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