Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Completeness-resolvable graphs

Published 8 Jan 2021 in math.CO | (2101.02838v1)

Abstract: Given a connected graph $G=(V(G), E(G))$, the length of a shortest path from a vertex $u$ to a vertex $v$ is denoted by $d(u,v)$. For a proper subset $W$ of $V(G)$, let $m(W)$ be the maximum value of $d(u,v)$ as $u$ ranging over $W$ and $v$ ranging over $V(G)\setminus W$. The proper subset $W={w_1,\ldots,w_{|W|}}$ is a {\em completeness-resolving set} of $G$ if $$ \Psi_W: V(G)\setminus W \longrightarrow [m(W)]{|W|},\qquad u\longmapsto (d(w_1,u),\ldots,d(w_{|W|},u)) $$ is a bijection, where $$ [m(W)]{|W|}={(a_{(1)},\ldots,a_{(|W|)})\mid 1\leq a_{(i)}\leq m(W)\text{ for each }i=1,\ldots,|W|}. $$ A graph is {\em completeness-resolvable} if it admits a completeness-resolving set. In this paper, we first construct the set of all completeness-resolvable graphs by using the edge coverings of some vertices in given bipartite graphs, and then establish posets on some subsets of this set by the spanning subgraph relationship. Based on each poset, we find the maximum graph and give the lower and upper bounds for the number of edges in a minimal graph. Furthermore, minimal graphs satisfying the lower or upper bound are characterized.

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Authors (3)

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.