4,237 research outputs found
3-Factor-criticality of vertex-transitive graphs
A graph of order is -factor-critical, where is an integer of the
same parity as , if the removal of any set of vertices results in a
graph with a perfect matching. 1-Factor-critical graphs and 2-factor-critical
graphs are factor-critical graphs and bicritical graphs, respectively. It is
well known that every connected vertex-transitive graph of odd order is
factor-critical and every connected non-bipartite vertex-transitive graph of
even order is bicritical. In this paper, we show that a simple connected
vertex-transitive graph of odd order at least 5 is 3-factor-critical if and
only if it is not a cycle.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Approximating the Minimum Equivalent Digraph
The MEG (minimum equivalent graph) problem is, given a directed graph, to
find a small subset of the edges that maintains all reachability relations
between nodes. The problem is NP-hard. This paper gives an approximation
algorithm with performance guarantee of pi^2/6 ~ 1.64. The algorithm and its
analysis are based on the simple idea of contracting long cycles. (This result
is strengthened slightly in ``On strongly connected digraphs with bounded cycle
length'' (1996).) The analysis applies directly to 2-Exchange, a simple ``local
improvement'' algorithm, showing that its performance guarantee is 1.75.Comment: conference version in ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms
(1994
Notes on the connectivity of Cayley coset digraphs
Hamidoune's connectivity results for hierarchical Cayley digraphs are
extended to Cayley coset digraphs and thus to arbitrary vertex transitive
digraphs. It is shown that if a Cayley coset digraph can be hierarchically
decomposed in a certain way, then it is optimally vertex connected. The results
are obtained by extending the methods used by Hamidoune. They are used to show
that cycle-prefix graphs are optimally vertex connected. This implies that
cycle-prefix graphs have good fault tolerance properties.Comment: 15 page
4-Factor-criticality of vertex-transitive graphs
A graph of order is -factor-critical, where is an integer of the
same parity as , if the removal of any set of vertices results in a
graph with a perfect matching. 1-factor-critical graphs and 2-factor-critical
graphs are well-known factor-critical graphs and bicritical graphs,
respectively. It is known that if a connected vertex-transitive graph has odd
order, then it is factor-critical, otherwise it is elementary bipartite or
bicritical. In this paper, we show that a connected vertex-transitive
non-bipartite graph of even order at least 6 is 4-factor-critical if and only
if its degree is at least 5. This result implies that each connected
non-bipartite Cayley graphs of even order and degree at least 5 is
2-extendable.Comment: 34 pages, 3 figure
Hamiltonicity of 3-arc graphs
An arc of a graph is an oriented edge and a 3-arc is a 4-tuple of
vertices such that both and are paths of length two. The
3-arc graph of a graph is defined to have vertices the arcs of such
that two arcs are adjacent if and only if is a 3-arc of
. In this paper we prove that any connected 3-arc graph is Hamiltonian, and
all iterative 3-arc graphs of any connected graph of minimum degree at least
three are Hamiltonian. As a consequence we obtain that if a vertex-transitive
graph is isomorphic to the 3-arc graph of a connected arc-transitive graph of
degree at least three, then it is Hamiltonian. This confirms the well known
conjecture, that all vertex-transitive graphs with finitely many exceptions are
Hamiltonian, for a large family of vertex-transitive graphs. We also prove that
if a graph with at least four vertices is Hamilton-connected, then so are its
iterative 3-arc graphs.Comment: in press Graphs and Combinatorics, 201
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