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A radio antipodal coloring of a connected graph with diameter is an assignment of positive integers to the vertices of , with assigned , such that
for every two distinct vertices , of , where is the distance between and in . The radio antipodal coloring number of a radio antipodal coloring of is the maximum color assigned to a vertex of . The radio antipodal chromatic number of is over all radio antipodal colorings of . Radio antipodal chromatic numbers of paths...
For a connected graph G of diameter d and an integer k with 1 ≤ k ≤ d, a radio k-coloring of G is an assignment c of colors (positive integers) to the vertices of G such that
d(u,v) + |c(u)- c(v)| ≥ 1 + k
for every two distinct vertices u and v of G, where d(u,v) is the distance between u and v. The value rcₖ(c) of a radio k-coloring c of G is the maximum color assigned to a vertex of G. The radio k-chromatic number rcₖ(G) of G is the minimum value of rcₖ(c) taken over all radio k-colorings c of...
Frequency planning consists in allocating frequencies to the transmitters of a cellular network so as to ensure that no pair of transmitters interfere. We study the problem of reducing interference by modeling this by a radio k-labeling problem on graphs: For a graph G and an integer k ≥ 1, a radio k-labeling of G is an assignment f of non negative integers to the vertices of G such that
,
for any two vertices x and y, where is the distance between x and y in G. The radio k-chromatic number is...
For a graph G and any two vertices u and v in G, let d(u,v) denote the distance between u and v and let diam(G) be the diameter of G. A multilevel distance labeling (or radio labeling) for G is a function f that assigns to each vertex of G a positive integer such that for any two distinct vertices u and v, d(u,v) + |f(u) - f(v)| ≥ diam(G) + 1. The largest integer in the range of f is called the span of f and is denoted span(f). The radio number of G, denoted rn(G), is the minimum span of any radio...
A radio labeling is an assignment c:V(G) → N such that every distinct pair of vertices u,v satisfies the inequality d(u,v) + |c(u)-c(v)| ≥ diam(G) + 1. The span of a radio labeling is the maximum value. The radio number of G, rn(G), is the minimum span over all radio labelings of G. Generalized prism graphs, denoted , s ≥ 1, n ≥ s, have vertex set (i,j) | i = 1,2 and j = 1,...,n and edge set ((i,j),(i,j ±1)) ∪ ((1,i),(2,i+σ)) | σ = -⌊(s-1)/2⌋...,0,...,⌊s/2⌋. In this paper we determine the radio...
Let be a nontrivial connected graph on which is defined a coloring , , of the edges of , where adjacent edges may be colored the same. A path in is a rainbow path if no two edges of are colored the same. The graph is rainbow-connected if contains a rainbow path for every two vertices and of . The minimum for which there exists such a -edge coloring is the rainbow connection number of . If for every pair of distinct vertices, contains a rainbow geodesic, then is...
An edge-coloured connected graph G = (V,E) is called rainbow-connected if each pair of distinct vertices of G is connected by a path whose edges have distinct colours. The rainbow connection number of G, denoted by rc(G), is the minimum number of colours such that G is rainbow-connected. In this paper we prove that rc(G) ≤ k if |V (G)| = n and for all integers n and k with n − 6 ≤ k ≤ n − 3. We also show that this bound is tight.
An edge-colored graph G is rainbow connected, if any two vertices are connected by a path whose edges have distinct colors. The rainbow connection number of a connected graph G, denoted rc(G), is the smallest number of colors that are needed in order to make G rainbow connected. In this paper we show that rc(G) ≤ 3 if |E(G)| ≥ [...] + 2, and rc(G) ≤ 4 if |E(G)| ≥ [...] + 3. These bounds are sharp.
A path in an edge-colored graph G is rainbow if no two edges of the path are colored the same. The rainbow connection number rc(G) of G is the smallest integer k for which there exists a k-edge-coloring of G such that every pair of distinct vertices of G is connected by a rainbow path. Let f(d) denote the minimum number such that rc(G) ≤ f(d) for each bridgeless graph G with diameter d. In this paper, we shall show that 7 ≤ f(3) ≤ 9.
Let Γn be the complete undirected Cayley graph of the odd cyclic group Zn. Connected graphs whose vertices are rainbow tetrahedra in Γn are studied, with any two such vertices adjacent if and only if they share (as tetrahedra) precisely two distinct triangles. This yields graphs G of largest degree 6, asymptotic diameter |V (G)|1/3 and almost all vertices with degree: (a) 6 in G; (b) 4 in exactly six connected subgraphs of the (3, 6, 3, 6)-semi- regular tessellation; and (c) 3 in exactly four connected...
A ranking on a graph is an assignment of positive integers to its vertices such that any path between two vertices with the same label contains a vertex with a larger label. The rank number of a graph is the fewest number of labels that can be used in a ranking. The rank number of a graph is known for many families, including the ladder graph P2 × Pn. We consider how ”bending” a ladder affects the rank number. We prove that in certain cases the rank number does not change, and in others the rank...
A graph is -stratified if its vertex set is partitioned into two classes, where the vertices in one class are colored red and those in the other class are colored blue. Let be a -stratified graph rooted at some blue vertex . An -coloring of a graph is a red-blue coloring of the vertices of in which every blue vertex belongs to a copy of rooted at . The -domination number is the minimum number of red vertices in an -coloring of . In this paper, we study -domination where is...
For a graph G and a vertex-coloring c:V(G) → 1,2, ...,k, the color code of a vertex v is the (k+1)-tuple (a₀,a₁, ...,aₖ), where a₀ = c(v), and for 1 ≤ i ≤ k, is the number of neighbors of v colored i. A recognizable coloring is a coloring such that distinct vertices have distinct color codes. The recognition number of a graph is the minimum k for which G has a recognizable k-coloring. In this paper we prove three conjectures of Chartrand et al. in [8] regarding the recognition number of cycles...
Let G be a connected graph and let c:V(G) → 1,2,...,k be a coloring of the vertices of G for some positive integer k (where adjacent vertices may be colored the same). The color code of a vertex v of G (with respect to c) is the ordered (k+1)-tuple code(v) = (a₀,a₁,...,aₖ) where a₀ is the color assigned to v and for 1 ≤ i ≤ k, is the number of vertices adjacent to v that are colored i. The coloring c is called recognizable if distinct vertices have distinct color codes and the recognition number...
In this paper we show upper bounds for the sum and the product of the lower domination parameters and the chromatic index of a graph. We also present some families of graphs for which these upper bounds are achieved. Next, we give a lower bound for the sum of the upper domination parameters and the chromatic index. This lower bound is a function of the number of vertices of a graph and a new graph parameter which is defined here. In this case we also characterize graphs for which a respective equality...
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