3,030 research outputs found
Existences of rainbow matchings and rainbow matching covers
Let be an edge-coloured graph. A rainbow subgraph in is a subgraph
such that its edges have distinct colours. The minimum colour degree
of is the smallest number of distinct colours on the edges
incident with a vertex of . We show that every edge-coloured graph on
vertices with contains a rainbow matching
of size at least , which improves the previous result for .
Let be the maximum number of edges of the same
colour incident with a vertex of . We also prove that if and
, then can be edge-decomposed into at most
rainbow matchings. This result is sharp and improves a
result of LeSaulnier and West
Hamilton cycles in sparse robustly expanding digraphs
The notion of robust expansion has played a central role in the solution of
several conjectures involving the packing of Hamilton cycles in graphs and
directed graphs. These and other results usually rely on the fact that every
robustly expanding (di)graph with suitably large minimum degree contains a
Hamilton cycle. Previous proofs of this require Szemer\'edi's Regularity Lemma
and so this fact can only be applied to dense, sufficiently large robust
expanders. We give a proof that does not use the Regularity Lemma and, indeed,
we can apply our result to suitable sparse robustly expanding digraphs.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Electronic Journal of Combinatoric
Spanning trees with few branch vertices
A branch vertex in a tree is a vertex of degree at least three. We prove
that, for all , every connected graph on vertices with minimum
degree at least contains a spanning tree having at most
branch vertices. Asymptotically, this is best possible and solves, in less
general form, a problem of Flandrin, Kaiser, Ku\u{z}el, Li and Ryj\'a\u{c}ek,
which was originally motivated by an optimization problem in the design of
optical networks.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, to appear in SIAM J. of Discrete Mat
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