We study the scaling behavior of the size of minimum dominating set (MDS) in
scale-free networks, with respect to network size N and power-law exponent
γ, while keeping the average degree fixed. We study ensembles generated
by three different network construction methods, and we use a greedy algorithm
to approximate the MDS. With a structural cutoff imposed on the maximal degree
(kmax=N) we find linear scaling of the MDS size with respect to
N in all three network classes. Without any cutoff (kmax=N−1) two of
the network classes display a transition at γ≈1.9, with linear
scaling above, and vanishingly weak dependence below, but in the third network
class we find linear scaling irrespective of γ. We find that the partial
MDS, which dominates a given z<1 fraction of nodes, displays essentially the
same scaling behavior as the MDS