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We consider the question of the range of the number of cycles possible in a 2-factor of a 2-connected claw-free graph with sufficiently high minimum degree. (By claw-free we mean the graph has no induced .) In particular, we show that for such a graph G of order n ≥ 51 with δ(G) ≥ (n-2)/3, G contains a 2-factor with exactly k cycles, for 1 ≤ k ≤ (n-24)/3. We also show that this result is sharp in the sense that if we lower δ(G), we cannot obtain the full range of values for k.
An edge of is singular if it does not lie on any triangle of ; otherwise, it is non-singular. A vertex of a graph is called locally connected if the induced subgraph by its neighborhood is connected; otherwise, it is called locally disconnected. In this paper, we prove that if a connected claw-free graph of order at least three satisfies the following two conditions: (i) for each locally disconnected vertex of degree at least in there is a nonnegative integer such that lies...
Let be a (finite undirected) connected graph (with no loop or multiple edge). The set of all shortest paths in is defined as the set of all paths , then the lenght of does not exceed the length of . While the definition of is based on determining the length of a path. Theorem 1 gives - metaphorically speaking - an “almost non-metric” characterization of : a characterization in which the length of a path greater than one is not considered. Two other theorems are derived from Theorem...
Let T be a hamiltonian tournament with n vertices and γ a hamiltonian cycle of T. In previous works we introduced and studied the concept of cycle-pancyclism to capture the following question: What is the maximum intersection with γ of a cycle of length k? More precisely, for a cycle Cₖ of length k in T we denote , the number of arcs that γ and Cₖ have in common. Let and f(n,k) = minf(k,T,γ)|T is a hamiltonian tournament with n vertices, and γ a hamiltonian cycle of T. In previous papers we gave...
An edge-colored cycle is rainbow if its edges are colored with distinct colors. A Gallai (multi)graph is a simple, complete, edge-colored (multi)graph lacking rainbow triangles. As has been previously shown for Gallai graphs, we show that Gallai multigraphs admit a simple iterative construction. We then use this structure to prove Ramsey-type results within Gallai colorings. Moreover, we show that Gallai multigraphs give rise to a surprising and highly structured decomposition into directed trees...
Let G be a graph on n vertices and let H be a given graph. We say that G is pancyclic, if it contains cycles of all lengths from 3 up to n, and that it is H-f1-heavy, if for every induced subgraph K of G isomorphic to H and every two vertices u, v ∈ V (K), dK(u, v) = 2 implies [...] mindG(u),dG(v)≥n+12 . In this paper we prove that every 2-connected K1,3, P5-f1-heavy graph is pancyclic. This result completes the answer to the problem of finding f1-heavy pairs of subgraphs implying pancyclicity...
The 'two paths problem' is stated as follows. Given an undirected graph G = (V,E) and vertices s₁,t₁;s₂,t₂, the problem is to determine whether or not G admits two vertex-disjoint paths P₁ and P₂ connecting s₁ with t₁ and s₂ with t₂ respectively. In this paper we give a linear (O(|V|+ |E|)) algorithm to solve the above problem on a permutation graph.
ACM Computing Classification System (1998): G.2.2.We propose an algorithm that computes the length of a longest
path in a cactus graph. Our algorithm can easily be modified to output a
longest path as well or to solve the problem on cacti with edge or vertex
weights. The algorithm works on rooted cacti and assigns to each vertex
a two-number label, the first number being the desired parameter of the
subcactus rooted at that vertex. The algorithm applies the divide-and-conquer approach and computes...
The following result is proved: Let be a connected graph of order . Then for every matching in there exists a hamiltonian cycle of such that .
The concept of median of a tree is modified, considering only distances from the terminal vertices instead of distances from all vertices.
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