28 research outputs found
Total embedding distributions of Ringel ladders
The total embedding distributions of a graph is consisted of the orientable
embeddings and non- orientable embeddings and have been know for few classes of
graphs. The genus distribution of Ringel ladders is determined in [Discrete
Mathematics 216 (2000) 235-252] by E.H. Tesar. In this paper, the explicit
formula for non-orientable embeddings of Ringel ladders is obtained
Recommended from our members
Genus Distributions of Graphs Constructed Through Amalgamations
Graphs are commonly represented as points in space connected by lines. The points in space are the vertices of the graph, and the lines joining them are the edges of the graph. A general definition of a graph is considered here, where multiple edges are allowed between two vertices and an edge is permitted to connect a vertex to itself. It is assumed that graphs are connected, i.e., any vertex in the graph is reachable from another distinct vertex either directly through an edge connecting them or by a path consisting of intermediate vertices and connecting edges. Under this visual representation, graphs can be drawn on various surfaces. The focus of my research is restricted to a class of surfaces that are characterized as compact connected orientable 2-manifolds. The drawings of graphs on surfaces that are of primary interest follow certain prescribed rules. These are called 2-cellular graph embeddings, or simply embeddings. A well-known closed formula makes it easy to enumerate the total number of 2-cellular embeddings for a given graph over all surfaces. A much harder task is to give a surface-wise breakdown of this number as a sequence of numbers that count the number of 2-cellular embeddings of a graph for each orientable surface. This sequence of numbers for a graph is known as the genus distribution of a graph. Prior research on genus distributions of graphs has primarily focused on making calculations of genus distributions for specific families of graphs. These families of graphs have often been contrived, and the methods used for finding their genus distributions have not been general enough to extend to other graph families. The research I have undertaken aims at developing and using a general method that frames the problem of calculating genus distributions of large graphs in terms of a partitioning of the genus distributions of smaller graphs. To this end, I use various operations such as edge-amalgamation, self-edge-amalgamation, and vertex-amalgamation to construct large graphs out of smaller graphs, by coupling their vertices and edges together in certain consistent ways. This method assumes that the partitioned genus distribution of the smaller graphs is known or is easily calculable by computer, for instance, by using the famous Heffter-Edmonds algorithm. As an outcome of the techniques used, I obtain general recurrences and closed-formulas that give genus distributions for infinitely many recursively specifiable graph families. I also give an easily understood method for finding non-trivial examples of distinct graphs having the same genus distribution. In addition to this, I describe an algorithm that computes the genus distributions for a family of graphs known as the 4-regular outerplanar graphs
Recommended from our members
Genus Distributions for Two Classes of Graphs
The set of orientable imbeddings of a graph can be partitioned according to the genus of the imbedding surfaces. A genus-respecting breakdown of the number of orientable imbeddings is obtained for every graph in each of two infinite classes. These are the first two infinite classes of graphs for which such calculations have been achieved, except for a few classes, such as trees and cycles, whose members have all their polygonal orientable imbeddings in the sphere
Recommended from our members
Genus distributions for two classes of graphs
The set of orientable imbeddings of a graph can be partitioned according to the genus of the imbedding surfaces. A genus-respecting breakdown of the number of orientable imbeddings is obtained for every graph in each of two infinite classes. It is proved that the genus distribution of any member of either class is strongly unimodal. These are the first two infinite classes of graphs for which such calculations have been achieved, except for a few classes, such as trees and cycles, whose members have all their cellular orientable imbeddings in the sphere
Recommended from our members
Testing Convexity and Acyclicity, and New Constructions for Dense Graph Embeddings
Property testing, especially that of geometric and graph properties, is an ongoing area of research. In this thesis, we present a result from each of the two areas. For the problem of convexity testing in high dimensions, we give nearly matching upper and lower bounds for the sample complexity of algorithms have one-sided and two-sided error, where algorithms only have access to labeled samples independently drawn from the standard multivariate Gaussian. In the realm of graph property testing, we give an improved lower bound for testing acyclicity in directed graphs of bounded degree.
Central to the area of topological graph theory is the genus parameter, but the complexity of determining the genus of a graph is poorly understood when graphs become nearly complete. We summarize recent progress in understanding the space of minimum genus embeddings of such dense graphs. In particular, we classify all possible face distributions realizable by minimum genus embeddings of complete graphs, present new constructions for genus embeddings of the complete graphs, and find unified constructions for minimum triangulations of surfaces