A set of vertices S resolves a graph G if every vertex is uniquely
determined by its vector of distances to the vertices in S. The metric
dimension of G is the minimum cardinality of a resolving set of G.
Let {G1,G2,…,Gn} be a finite collection of graphs and each
Gi has a fixed vertex v0i or a fixed edge e0i called a terminal
vertex or edge, respectively. The \emph{vertex-amalgamation} of G1,G2,…,Gn, denoted by Vertex−Amal{Gi;v0i}, is formed by taking all
the Gi's and identifying their terminal vertices. Similarly, the
\emph{edge-amalgamation} of G1,G2,…,Gn, denoted by
Edge−Amal{Gi;e0i}, is formed by taking all the Gi's and identifying
their terminal edges.
Here we study the metric dimensions of vertex-amalgamation and
edge-amalgamation for finite collection of arbitrary graphs. We give lower and
upper bounds for the dimensions, show that the bounds are tight, and construct
infinitely many graphs for each possible value between the bounds.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, Seventh Czech-Slovak International Symposium on
Graph Theory, Combinatorics, Algorithms and Applications (CSGT2013), revised
version 21 December 201