342,955 research outputs found

    On the probability of planarity of a random graph near the critical point

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    Consider the uniform random graph G(n,M)G(n,M) with nn vertices and MM edges. Erd\H{o}s and R\'enyi (1960) conjectured that the limit \lim_{n \to \infty} \Pr\{G(n,\textstyle{n\over 2}) is planar}} exists and is a constant strictly between 0 and 1. \L uczak, Pittel and Wierman (1994) proved this conjecture and Janson, \L uczak, Knuth and Pittel (1993) gave lower and upper bounds for this probability. In this paper we determine the exact probability of a random graph being planar near the critical point M=n/2M=n/2. For each λ\lambda, we find an exact analytic expression for p(λ)=lim⁥n→∞Pr⁥G(n,n2(1+λn−1/3))isplanar. p(\lambda) = \lim_{n \to \infty} \Pr{G(n,\textstyle{n\over 2}(1+\lambda n^{-1/3})) is planar}. In particular, we obtain p(0)≈0.99780p(0) \approx 0.99780. We extend these results to classes of graphs closed under taking minors. As an example, we show that the probability of G(n,n2)G(n,\textstyle{n\over 2}) being series-parallel converges to 0.98003. For the sake of completeness and exposition we reprove in a concise way several basic properties we need of a random graph near the critical point.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur

    Spacelike radial graphs of prescribed mean curvature in the Lorentz-Minkowski space

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    In this paper we investigate the existence and uniqueness of spacelike radial graphs of prescribed mean curvature in the Lorentz-Minkowski space Ln+1\mathbb{L}^{n+1}, for n≄2n\geq 2, spanning a given boundary datum lying on the hyperbolic space Hn\mathbb{H}^n

    IST Austria Technical Report

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    We study algorithmic questions for concurrent systems where the transitions are labeled from a complete, closed semiring, and path properties are algebraic with semiring operations. The algebraic path properties can model dataflow analysis problems, the shortest path problem, and many other natural properties that arise in program analysis. We consider that each component of the concurrent system is a graph with constant treewidth, and it is known that the controlflow graphs of most programs have constant treewidth. We allow for multiple possible queries, which arise naturally in demand driven dataflow analysis problems (e.g., alias analysis). The study of multiple queries allows us to consider the tradeoff between the resource usage of the \emph{one-time} preprocessing and for \emph{each individual} query. The traditional approaches construct the product graph of all components and apply the best-known graph algorithm on the product. In the traditional approach, even the answer to a single query requires the transitive closure computation (i.e., the results of all possible queries), which provides no room for tradeoff between preprocessing and query time. Our main contributions are algorithms that significantly improve the worst-case running time of the traditional approach, and provide various tradeoffs depending on the number of queries. For example, in a concurrent system of two components, the traditional approach requires hexic time in the worst case for answering one query as well as computing the transitive closure, whereas we show that with one-time preprocessing in almost cubic time, each subsequent query can be answered in at most linear time, and even the transitive closure can be computed in almost quartic time. Furthermore, we establish conditional optimality results that show that the worst-case running times of our algorithms cannot be improved without achieving major breakthroughs in graph algorithms (such as improving the worst-case bounds for the shortest path problem in general graphs whose current best-known bound has not been improved in five decades). Finally, we provide a prototype implementation of our algorithms which significantly outperforms the existing algorithmic methods on several benchmarks

    L(2, 1)-labeling of circulant graphs

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    An L(2, 1)-labeling of a graph Γ is an assignment of non-negative integers to the vertices such that adjacent vertices receive labels that differ by at least 2, and those at a distance of two receive labels that differ by at least one. Let λ12(Γ) denote the least λ such that Γ admits an L(2, 1)-labeling using labels from {0, 1, . . ., λ}. A Cayley graph of group G is called a circulant graph of order n, if G = Zn. In this paper initially we investigate the upper bound for the span of the L(2, 1)-labeling for Cayley graphs on cyclic groups with “large” connection sets. Then we extend our observation and find the span of L(2, 1)-labeling for any circulants of order n
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