718 research outputs found

    Factor-Critical Property in 3-Dominating-Critical Graphs

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    A vertex subset SS of a graph GG is a dominating set if every vertex of GG either belongs to SS or is adjacent to a vertex of SS. The cardinality of a smallest dominating set is called the dominating number of GG and is denoted by γ(G)\gamma(G). A graph GG is said to be γ\gamma- vertex-critical if γ(Gv)<γ(G)\gamma(G-v)< \gamma(G), for every vertex vv in GG. Let GG be a 2-connected K1,5K_{1,5}-free 3-vertex-critical graph. For any vertex vV(G)v \in V(G), we show that GvG-v has a perfect matching (except two graphs), which is a conjecture posed by Ananchuen and Plummer.Comment: 8 page

    On Murty-Simon Conjecture II

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    A graph is diameter two edge-critical if its diameter is two and the deletion of any edge increases the diameter. Murty and Simon conjectured that the number of edges in a diameter two edge-critical graph on nn vertices is at most n24\lfloor \frac{n^{2}}{4} \rfloor and the extremal graph is the complete bipartite graph Kn2,n2K_{\lfloor \frac{n}{2} \rfloor, \lceil \frac{n}{2} \rceil}. In the series papers [7-9], the Murty-Simon Conjecture stated by Haynes et al. is not the original conjecture, indeed, it is only for the diameter two edge-critical graphs of even order. In this paper, we completely prove the Murty-Simon Conjecture for the graphs whose complements have vertex connectivity \ell, where =1,2,3\ell = 1, 2, 3; and for the graphs whose complements have an independent vertex cut of cardinality at least three.Comment: 9 pages, submitted for publication on May 10, 201

    A numerical procedure for recovering true scattering coefficients from measurements with wide-beam antennas

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    A numerical procedure for estimating the true scattering coefficient, sigma(sup 0), from measurements made using wide-beam antennas. The use of wide-beam antennas results in an inaccurate estimate of sigma(sup 0) if the narrow-beam approximation is used in the retrieval process for sigma(sup 0). To reduce this error, a correction procedure was proposed that estimates the error resulting from the narrow-beam approximation and uses the error to obtain a more accurate estimate of sigma(sup 0). An exponential model was assumed to take into account the variation of sigma(sup 0) with incidence angles, and the model parameters are estimated from measured data. Based on the model and knowledge of the antenna pattern, the procedure calculates the error due to the narrow-beam approximation. The procedure is shown to provide a significant improvement in estimation of sigma(sup 0) obtained with wide-beam antennas. The proposed procedure is also shown insensitive to the assumed sigma(sup 0) model

    Algorithm and Architecture for Path Metric Aided Bit-Flipping Decoding of Polar Codes

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    Polar codes attract more and more attention of researchers in recent years, since its capacity achieving property. However, their error-correction performance under successive cancellation (SC) decoding is inferior to other modern channel codes at short or moderate blocklengths. SC-Flip (SCF) decoding algorithm shows higher performance than SC decoding by identifying possibly erroneous decisions made in initial SC decoding and flipping them in the sequential decoding attempts. However, it performs not well when there are more than one erroneous decisions in a codeword. In this paper, we propose a path metric aided bit-flipping decoding algorithm to identify and correct more errors efficiently. In this algorithm, the bit-flipping list is generated based on both log likelihood ratio (LLR) based path metric and bit-flipping metric. The path metric is used to verify the effectiveness of bit-flipping. In order to reduce the decoding latency and computational complexity, its corresponding pipeline architecture is designed. By applying these decoding algorithms and pipeline architecture, an improvement on error-correction performance can be got up to 0.25dB compared with SCF decoding at the frame error rate of 10410^{-4}, with low average decoding latency.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (2019 WCNC

    On the Existence of General Factors in Regular Graphs

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    Let GG be a graph, and H ⁣:V(G)2NH\colon V(G)\to 2^\mathbb{N} a set function associated with GG. A spanning subgraph FF of GG is called an HH-factor if the degree of any vertex vv in FF belongs to the set H(v)H(v). This paper contains two results on the existence of HH-factors in regular graphs. First, we construct an rr-regular graph without some given HH^*-factor. In particular, this gives a negative answer to a problem recently posed by Akbari and Kano. Second, by using Lov\'asz's characterization theorem on the existence of (g,f)(g, f)-factors, we find a sharp condition for the existence of general HH-factors in {r,r+1}\{r, r+1\}-graphs, in terms of the maximum and minimum of HH. The result reduces to Thomassen's theorem for the case that H(v)H(v) consists of the same two consecutive integers for all vertices vv, and to Tutte's theorem if the graph is regular in addition.Comment: 10 page

    μ-Oxalato-κ4 O 1,O 2:O 1′,O 2′-bis­[diaqua­(2,2′-bipyridyl-κ2 N,N′)zinc] bis­[2-(1H-benzotriazol-1-yl)acetate] hexa­hydrate

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    The asymmetric unit of the title compound, [Zn2(C2O4)(C10H8N2)2(H2O)4](C8H6N3O2)2·6H2O, contains one half of the centrosymmetric binuclear cation, one anion and three water mol­ecules. In the cation, the oxalate ligand bridges two ZnII ions in a bis-bidentate fashion, so each ZnII ion is coordinated by two O atoms from the oxalate ligand, two N atoms from two 2,2′-bipyridine ligands and two water mol­ecules in a distorted octa­hedral arrangement. The mean planes of the oxalate and 2,2′-bipyridine ligands form a dihedral angle of 80.0 (1)°. An extensive three-dimensional hydrogen-bonding network formed by classical O—H⋯O and O—H⋯N inter­actions consolidates the crystal packing
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