1,127 research outputs found
Embedding graphs having Ore-degree at most five
Let and be graphs on vertices, where is sufficiently large.
We prove that if has Ore-degree at most 5 and has minimum degree at
least then Comment: accepted for publication at SIAM J. Disc. Mat
Embedding large subgraphs into dense graphs
What conditions ensure that a graph G contains some given spanning subgraph
H? The most famous examples of results of this kind are probably Dirac's
theorem on Hamilton cycles and Tutte's theorem on perfect matchings. Perfect
matchings are generalized by perfect F-packings, where instead of covering all
the vertices of G by disjoint edges, we want to cover G by disjoint copies of a
(small) graph F. It is unlikely that there is a characterization of all graphs
G which contain a perfect F-packing, so as in the case of Dirac's theorem it
makes sense to study conditions on the minimum degree of G which guarantee a
perfect F-packing.
The Regularity lemma of Szemeredi and the Blow-up lemma of Komlos, Sarkozy
and Szemeredi have proved to be powerful tools in attacking such problems and
quite recently, several long-standing problems and conjectures in the area have
been solved using these. In this survey, we give an outline of recent progress
(with our main emphasis on F-packings, Hamiltonicity problems and tree
embeddings) and describe some of the methods involved
A Dirac type result on Hamilton cycles in oriented graphs
We show that for each \alpha>0 every sufficiently large oriented graph G with
\delta^+(G),\delta^-(G)\ge 3|G|/8+ \alpha |G| contains a Hamilton cycle. This
gives an approximate solution to a problem of Thomassen. In fact, we prove the
stronger result that G is still Hamiltonian if
\delta(G)+\delta^+(G)+\delta^-(G)\geq 3|G|/2 + \alpha |G|. Up to the term
\alpha |G| this confirms a conjecture of H\"aggkvist. We also prove an Ore-type
theorem for oriented graphs.Comment: Added an Ore-type resul
On perfect packings in dense graphs
We say that a graph G has a perfect H-packing if there exists a set of
vertex-disjoint copies of H which cover all the vertices in G. We consider
various problems concerning perfect H-packings: Given positive integers n, r,
D, we characterise the edge density threshold that ensures a perfect
K_r-packing in any graph G on n vertices and with minimum degree at least D. We
also give two conjectures concerning degree sequence conditions which force a
graph to contain a perfect H-packing. Other related embedding problems are also
considered. Indeed, we give a structural result concerning K_r-free graphs that
satisfy a certain degree sequence condition.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure. Electronic Journal of Combinatorics 20(1) (2013)
#P57. This version contains an open problem sectio
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 sufficient conditions for Hamiltonicity in dense graphs
We study structural conditions in dense graphs that guarantee the existence
of vertex-spanning substructures such as Hamilton cycles. It is easy to see
that every Hamiltonian graph is connected, has a perfect fractional matching
and, excluding the bipartite case, contains an odd cycle. Our main result in
turn states that any large enough graph that robustly satisfies these
properties must already be Hamiltonian. Moreover, the same holds for embedding
powers of cycles and graphs of sublinear bandwidth subject to natural
generalisations of connectivity, matchings and odd cycles.
This solves the embedding problem that underlies multiple lines of research
on sufficient conditions for Hamiltonicity in dense graphs. As applications, we
recover and establish Bandwidth Theorems in a variety of settings including
Ore-type degree conditions, P\'osa-type degree conditions, deficiency-type
conditions, locally dense and inseparable graphs, multipartite graphs as well
as robust expanders
Trees in Connected Graphs
The focus of the Master’s Thesis will be the investigation of current research involving trees that cover subsets of the vertex set of a connected graph. The primary goal is the extension of some recent results and a conjecture of Horak and McAvaney. Given certain conditions, we will reformulate their conjecture that states that if a graph can be spanned by a number of edge-disjoint trees, we can provide a bound on the maximum degree of this collection of edge-disjoint trees. We are able to show that this conjecture is true if the number of trees used to span the graph is one. We will then look at a specific class of graphs, namely series-parallel graphs, and present several new extremal examples to show that these ”tree-like” graphs are difficult to analyze. A comprehensive survey of related literature is also included
- …