58 research outputs found

    Remarks on the existence of uniquely partitionable planar graphs

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    We consider the problem of the existence of uniquely partitionable planar graphs. We survey some recent results and we prove the nonexistence of uniquely (D1,D1)-partitionable planar graphs with respect to the property D1 "to be a forest"

    The Strong Perfect Graph Conjecture: 40 years of Attempts, and its Resolution

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    International audienceThe Strong Perfect Graph Conjecture (SPGC) was certainly one of the most challenging conjectures in graph theory. During more than four decades, numerous attempts were made to solve it, by combinatorial methods, by linear algebraic methods, or by polyhedral methods. The first of these three approaches yielded the first (and to date only) proof of the SPGC; the other two remain promising to consider in attempting an alternative proof. This paper is an unbalanced survey of the attempts to solve the SPGC; unbalanced, because (1) we devote a signicant part of it to the 'primitive graphs and structural faults' paradigm which led to the Strong Perfect Graph Theorem (SPGT); (2) we briefly present the other "direct" attempts, that is, the ones for which results exist showing one (possible) way to the proof; (3) we ignore entirely the "indirect" approaches whose aim was to get more information about the properties and structure of perfect graphs, without a direct impact on the SPGC. Our aim in this paper is to trace the path that led to the proof of the SPGT as completely as possible. Of course, this implies large overlaps with the recent book on perfect graphs [J.L. Ramirez-Alfonsin and B.A. Reed, eds., Perfect Graphs (Wiley & Sons, 2001).], but it also implies a deeper analysis (with additional results) and another viewpoint on the topic

    Partitioning a graph into disjoint cliques and a triangle-free graph

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    A graph G=(V,E) is partitionable if there exists a partition {A,B} of V such that A induces a disjoint union of cliques (i.e., G[A] is P_3-free) and B induces a triangle-free graph (i.e., G[B] is K_3-free). In this paper we investigate the computational complexity of deciding whether a graph is partitionable. The problem is known to be NP-complete on arbitrary graphs. Here it is proved that if a graph G is bull-free, planar, perfect, K_4-free or does not contain certain holes then deciding whether G is partitionable is NP-complete. This answers an open question posed by Thomassé, Trotignon and Vušković. In contrast a finite list of forbidden induced subgraphs is given for partitionable cographs

    Minimal reducible bounds for the class of k-degenerate graphs

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    AbstractLet (La,⊆) be the lattice of hereditary and additive properties of graphs. A reducible property R∈La is called minimal reducible bound for a property P∈La if in the interval (P,R) of the lattice La, there are only irreducible properties. We prove that the set B(Dk)={Dp∘Dq:k=p+q+1} is the covering set of minimal reducible bounds for the class Dk of all k-degenerate graphs

    Colorings of graphs, digraphs, and hypergraphs

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    Brooks' Theorem ist eines der bekanntesten Resultate über Graphenfärbungen: Sei G ein zusammenhängender Graph mit Maximalgrad d. Ist G kein vollständiger Graph, so lassen sich die Ecken von G so mit d Farben färben, dass zwei benachbarte Ecken unterschiedlich gefärbt sind. In der vorliegenden Arbeit liegt der Fokus auf Verallgemeinerungen von Brooks Theorem für Färbungen von Hypergraphen und gerichteten Graphen. Eine Färbung eines Hypergraphen ist eine Färbung der Ecken so, dass keine Kante monochromatisch ist. Auf Hypergraphen erweitert wurde der Satz von Brooks von R.P. Jones. Im ersten Teil der Dissertation werden Möglichkeiten aufgezeigt, das Resultat von Jones weiter zu verallgemeinern. Kernstück ist ein Zerlegungsresultat: Zu einem Hypergraphen H und einer Folge f=(f_1,…,f_p) von Funktionen, welche von V(H) in die natürlichen Zahlen abbilden, wird untersucht, ob es eine Zerlegung von H in induzierte Unterhypergraphen H_1,…,H_p derart gibt, dass jedes H_i strikt f_i-degeneriert ist. Dies bedeutet, dass jeder Unterhypergraph H_i' von H_i eine Ecke v enthält, deren Grad in H_i' kleiner als f_i(v) ist. Es wird bewiesen, dass die Bedingung f_1(v)+…+f_p(v) \geq d_H(v) für alle v fast immer ausreichend für die Existenz einer solchen Zerlegung ist und gezeigt, dass sich die Ausnahmefälle gut charakterisieren lassen. Durch geeignete Wahl der Funktion f lassen sich viele bekannte Resultate ableiten, was im dritten Kapitel erörtert wird. Danach werden zwei weitere Verallgemeinerungen des Satzes von Jones bewiesen: Ein Theorem zu DP-Färbungen von Hypergraphen und ein Resultat, welches die chromatische Zahl eines Hypergraphen mit dessen maximalem lokalen Kantenzusammenhang verbindet. Der zweite Teil untersucht Färbungen gerichteter Graphen. Eine azyklische Färbung eines gerichteten Graphen ist eine Färbung der Eckenmenge des gerichteten Graphen sodass es keine monochromatischen gerichteten Kreise gibt. Auf dieses Konzept lassen sich viele klassische Färbungsresultate übertragen. Dazu zählt auch Brooks Theorem, wie von Mohar bewiesen wurde. Im siebten Kapitel werden DP-Färbungen gerichteter Graphen untersucht. Insbesondere erfolgt der Transfer von Mohars Theorem auf DP-Färbungen. Das darauffolgende Kapitel befasst sich mit kritischen gerichteten Graphen. Insbesondere werden Konstruktionen für diese angegeben und die gerichtete Version des Satzes von Hajós bewiesen.Brooks‘ Theorem is one of the most known results in graph coloring theory: Let G be a connected graph with maximum degree d >2. If G is not a complete graph, then there is a coloring of the vertices of G with d colors such that no two adjacent vertices get the same color. Based on Brooks' result, various research topics in graph coloring arose. Also, it became evident that Brooks' Theorem could be transferred to many other coloring-concepts. The present thesis puts its focus especially on two of those concepts: hypergraphs and digraphs. A coloring of a hypergraph H is a coloring of its vertices such that no edge is monochromatic. Brooks' Theorem for hypergraphs was obtained by R.P. Jones. In the first part of this thesis, we present several ways how to further extend Jones' theorem. The key element is a partition result, to which the second chapter is devoted. Given a hypergraph H and a sequence f=(f_1,…,f_p) of functions, we examine if there is a partition of HH into induced subhypergraphs H_1,…,H_p such that each of the H_i is strictly f_i-degenerate. This means that in each non-empty subhypergraph H_i' of H_i there is a vertex v having degree d_{H_i'}(v

    Topics in graph colouring and extremal graph theory

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    In this thesis we consider three problems related to colourings of graphs and one problem in extremal graph theory. Let GG be a connected graph with nn vertices and maximum degree Δ(G)\Delta(G). Let Rk(G)R_k(G) denote the graph with vertex set all proper kk-colourings of GG and two kk-colourings are joined by an edge if they differ on the colour of exactly one vertex. Our first main result states that RΔ(G)+1(G)R_{\Delta(G)+1}(G) has a unique non-trivial component with diameter O(n2)O(n^2). This result can be viewed as a reconfigurations analogue of Brooks' Theorem and completes the study of reconfigurations of colourings of graphs with bounded maximum degree. A Kempe change is the operation of swapping some colours aa, bb of a component of the subgraph induced by vertices with colour aa or bb. Two colourings are Kempe equivalent if one can be obtained from the other by a sequence of Kempe changes. Our second main result states that all Δ(G)\Delta(G)-colourings of a graph GG are Kempe equivalent unless GG is the complete graph or the triangular prism. This settles a conjecture of Mohar (2007). Motivated by finding an algorithmic version of a structure theorem for bull-free graphs due to Chudnovsky (2012), we consider the computational complexity of deciding if the vertices of a graph can be partitioned into two parts such that one part is triangle-free and the other part is a collection of complete graphs. We show that this problem is NP-complete when restricted to five classes of graphs (including bull-free graphs) while polynomial-time solvable for the class of cographs. Finally we consider a graph-theoretic version formulated by Holroyd, Spencer and Talbot (2007) of the famous Erd\H{o}s-Ko-Rado Theorem in extremal combinatorics and obtain some results for the class of trees

    Spatiotemporal Multicast and Partitionable Group Membership Service

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    The recent advent of wireless mobile ad hoc networks and sensor networks creates many opportunities and challenges. This thesis explores some of them. In light of new application requirements in such environments, it proposes a new multicast paradigm called spatiotemporal multicast for supporting ad hoc network applications which require both spatial and temporal coordination. With a focus on a special case of spatiotemporal multicast, called mobicast, this work proposes several novel protocols and analyzes their performances. This dissertation also investigates implications of mobility on the classical group membership problem in distributed computing, proposes a new specification for a partitionable group membership service catering to applications on wireless mobile ad hoc networks, and provides a mobility-aware algorithm and middleware for this service. The results of this work bring new insights into the design and analysis of spatiotemporal communication protocols and fault-tolerant computing in wireless mobile ad hoc networks

    First-Order Model-Checking in Random Graphs and Complex Networks

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    Complex networks are everywhere. They appear for example in the form of biological networks, social networks, or computer networks and have been studied extensively. Efficient algorithms to solve problems on complex networks play a central role in today's society. Algorithmic meta-theorems show that many problems can be solved efficiently. Since logic is a powerful tool to model problems, it has been used to obtain very general meta-theorems. In this work, we consider all problems definable in first-order logic and analyze which properties of complex networks allow them to be solved efficiently. The mathematical tool to describe complex networks are random graph models. We define a property of random graph models called α\alpha-power-law-boundedness. Roughly speaking, a random graph is α\alpha-power-law-bounded if it does not admit strong clustering and its degree sequence is bounded by a power-law distribution with exponent at least α\alpha (i.e. the fraction of vertices with degree kk is roughly O(kα)O(k^{-\alpha})). We solve the first-order model-checking problem (parameterized by the length of the formula) in almost linear FPT time on random graph models satisfying this property with α3\alpha \ge 3. This means in particular that one can solve every problem expressible in first-order logic in almost linear expected time on these random graph models. This includes for example preferential attachment graphs, Chung-Lu graphs, configuration graphs, and sparse Erd\H{o}s-R\'{e}nyi graphs. Our results match known hardness results and generalize previous tractability results on this topic

    QPTAS for Weighted Geometric Set Cover on Pseudodisks and Halfspaces

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    International audienceWeighted geometric set-cover problems arise naturally in several geometric and non-geometric settings (e.g. the breakthrough of Bansal and Pruhs (FOCS 2010) reduces a wide class of machine scheduling problems to weighted geometric set-cover). More than two decades of research has succeeded in settling the (1 + status for most geometric set-cover problems, except for some basic scenarios which are still lacking. One is that of weighted disks in the plane for which, after a series of papers, Varadarajan (STOC 2010) presented a clever quasi-sampling technique, which together with improvements by Chan et al. (SODA 2012), yielded an O(1)-approximation algorithm. Even for the unweighted case, a PTAS for a fundamental class of objects called pseudodisks (which includes half-spaces, disks, unit-height rectangles, translates of convex sets etc.) is currently unknown. Another fundamental case is weighted halfspaces in R 3 , for which a PTAS is currently lacking. In this paper, we present a QPTAS for all of these remaining problems. Our results are based on the separator framework of Adamaszek and Wiese (FOCS 2013, SODA 2014), who recently obtained a QPTAS for weighted independent set of polygonal regions. This rules out the possibility that these problems are APX-hard, assuming NP DTIME(2 polylog(n)). Together with the recent work of Chan and Grant (CGTA 2014), this settles the APX-hardness status for all natural geometric set-cover problems
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