65 research outputs found

    Acyclic Subgraphs of Planar Digraphs

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    An acyclic set in a digraph is a set of vertices that induces an acyclic subgraph. In 2011, Harutyunyan conjectured that every planar digraph on nn vertices without directed 2-cycles possesses an acyclic set of size at least 3n/53n/5. We prove this conjecture for digraphs where every directed cycle has length at least 8. More generally, if gg is the length of the shortest directed cycle, we show that there exists an acyclic set of size at least (1−3/g)n(1 - 3/g)n.Comment: 9 page

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    Universal targets for homomorphisms of edge-colored graphs

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    A kk-edge-colored graph is a finite, simple graph with edges labeled by numbers 1,…,k1,\ldots,k. A function from the vertex set of one kk-edge-colored graph to another is a homomorphism if the endpoints of any edge are mapped to two different vertices connected by an edge of the same color. Given a class F\mathcal{F} of graphs, a kk-edge-colored graph H\mathbb{H} (not necessarily with the underlying graph in F\mathcal{F}) is kk-universal for F\mathcal{F} when any kk-edge-colored graph with the underlying graph in F\mathcal{F} admits a homomorphism to H\mathbb{H}. We characterize graph classes that admit kk-universal graphs. For such classes, we establish asymptotically almost tight bounds on the size of the smallest universal graph. For a nonempty graph GG, the density of GG is the maximum ratio of the number of edges to the number of vertices ranging over all nonempty subgraphs of GG. For a nonempty class F\mathcal{F} of graphs, D(F)D(\mathcal{F}) denotes the density of F\mathcal{F}, that is the supremum of densities of graphs in F\mathcal{F}. The main results are the following. The class F\mathcal{F} admits kk-universal graphs for k≥2k\geq2 if and only if there is an absolute constant that bounds the acyclic chromatic number of any graph in F\mathcal{F}. For any such class, there exists a constant cc, such that for any k≥2k \geq 2, the size of the smallest kk-universal graph is between kD(F)k^{D(\mathcal{F})} and ck⌈D(F)⌉ck^{\lceil D(\mathcal{F})\rceil}. A connection between the acyclic coloring and the existence of universal graphs was first observed by Alon and Marshall (Journal of Algebraic Combinatorics, 8(1):5-13, 1998). One of their results is that for planar graphs, the size of the smallest kk-universal graph is between k3+3k^3+3 and 5k45k^4. Our results yield that there exists a constant cc such that for all kk, this size is bounded from above by ck3ck^3
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