350 research outputs found

    Edge-partitioning graphs into regular and locally irregular components

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    International audienceA graph is locally irregular if every two adjacent vertices have distinct degrees. Recently, Baudon et al. introduced the notion of decomposition into locally irregular subgraphs. They conjectured that for almost every graph GG, there exists a minimum integer χirr(G)\chi^{\prime}_{\mathrm{irr}}(G) such that GG admits an edge-partition into χirr(G)\chi^{\prime}_{\mathrm{irr}}(G) classes, each of which induces a locally irregular graph. In particular, they conjectured that χirr(G)3\chi^{\prime}_{\mathrm{irr}}(G) \leq 3 for every GG, unless GG belongs to a well-characterized family of non-decomposable graphs. This conjecture is far from being settled, as notably (1) no constant upper bound onχirr(G)\chi^{\prime}_{\mathrm{irr}}(G) is known for GG bipartite, and (2) no satisfactory general upper bound on χirr(G)\chi^{\prime}_{\mathrm{irr}}(G) is known. We herein investigate the consequences on this question of allowing a decomposition to include regular components as well. As a main result, we prove that every bipartite graph admits such a decomposition into at most 66 subgraphs. This result implies that every graph GG admits a decomposition into at most 6(logχ(G)+1)6(\lfloor \mathrm{log} \chi (G) \rfloor +1) subgraphs whose components are regular or locally irregular

    Graph Decompositions

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    Decomposing Oriented Graphs into Six Locally Irregular Oriented Graphs

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    Decomposability of graphs into subgraphs fulfilling the 1-2-3 Conjecture

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    The well-known 1-2-3 Conjecture asserts that the edges of every graph without isolated edges can be weighted with 11, 22 and 33 so that adjacent vertices receive distinct weighted degrees. This is open in general. We prove that every dd-regular graph, d2d\geq 2, can be decomposed into at most 22 subgraphs (without isolated edges) fulfilling the 1-2-3 Conjecture if d{10,11,12,13,15,17}d\notin\{10,11,12,13,15,17\}, and into at most 33 such subgraphs in the remaining cases. Additionally, we prove that in general every graph without isolated edges can be decomposed into at most 2424 subgraphs fulfilling the 1-2-3 Conjecture, improving the previously best upper bound of 4040. Both results are partly based on applications of the Lov\'asz Local Lemma.Comment: 13 page

    Locally irregular edge-coloring of subcubic graphs

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    A graph is {\em locally irregular} if no two adjacent vertices have the same degree. A {\em locally irregular edge-coloring} of a graph GG is such an (improper) edge-coloring that the edges of any fixed color induce a locally irregular graph. Among the graphs admitting a locally irregular edge-coloring, i.e., {\em decomposable graphs}, only one is known to require 44 colors, while for all the others it is believed that 33 colors suffice. In this paper, we prove that decomposable claw-free graphs with maximum degree 33, all cycle permutation graphs, and all generalized Petersen graphs admit a locally irregular edge-coloring with at most 33 colors. We also discuss when 22 colors suffice for a locally irregular edge-coloring of cubic graphs and present an infinite family of cubic graphs of girth 44 which require 33 colors

    Labeling of graphs, sumset of squares of units modulo n and resonance varieties of matroids

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    This thesis investigates problems in a number of different areas of graph theory and its applications in other areas of mathematics. Motivated by the 1-2-3-Conjecture, we consider the closed distinguishing number of a graph G, denoted by dis[G]. We provide new upper bounds for dis[G] by using the Combinatorial Nullstellensatz. We prove that it is NP-complete to decide for a given planar subcubic graph G, whether dis[G] = 2. We show that for each integer t there is a bipartite graph G such that dis[G] \u3e t. Then some polynomial time algorithms and NP-hardness results for the problem of partitioning the edges of a graph into regular and/or locally irregular subgraphs are presented. We then move on to consider Johnson graphs to find resonance varieties of some classes of sparse paving matroids. The last application we consider is in number theory, where we find the number of solutions of the equation x21 + _ _ _ + x2 k = c, where c 2 Zn, and xi are all units in the ring Zn. Our approach is combinatorial using spectral graph theory
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