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Generalized Petersen graphs are certain graphs consisting of one quadratic factor. For these graphs some numerical invariants concerning the domination are studied, namely the domatic number , the total domatic number and the -ply domatic number for and . Some exact values and some inequalities are stated.
Let V₁, V₂ be a partition of the vertex set in a graph G, and let denote the least number of vertices needed in G to dominate . We prove that γ₁+γ₂ ≤ [4/5]|V(G)| for any graph without isolated vertices or edges, and that equality occurs precisely if G consists of disjoint 5-paths and edges between their centers. We also give upper and lower bounds on γ₁+γ₂ for graphs with minimum valency δ, and conjecture that γ₁+γ₂ ≤ [4/(δ+3)]|V(G)| for δ ≤ 5. As δ gets large, however, the largest possible value...
It is known that the removal of an edge from a graph G cannot decrease a domination number γ(G) and can increase it by at most one. Thus we can write that γ(G) ≤ γ(G-e) ≤ γ(G)+1 when an arbitrary edge e is removed. Here we present similar inequalities for the weakly connected domination number and the connected domination number , i.e., we show that and if G and G-e are connected. Additionally we show that and if G and G - Eₚ are connected and Eₚ = E(Hₚ) where Hₚ of order p is a connected...
For any graph , let and denote the vertex set and the edge set of respectively. The Boolean function graph of is a graph with vertex set and two vertices in are adjacent if and only if they correspond to two adjacent vertices of , two adjacent edges of or to a vertex and an edge not incident to it in . For brevity, this graph is denoted by . In this paper, we determine domination number, independent, connected, total, cycle, point-set, restrained, split and non-split domination...
For any graph , let and denote the vertex set and the edge set of respectively. The Boolean function graph of is a graph with vertex set and two vertices in are adjacent if and only if they correspond to two adjacent vertices of , two adjacent edges of or to a vertex and an edge not incident to it in . For brevity, this graph is denoted by . In this paper, we determine domination number, independent, connected, total, point-set, restrained, split and non-split domination numbers...
This paper contains a number of estimations of the split domination number and the maximal domination number of a graph with a deleted subset of edges which induces a complete subgraph Kₚ. We discuss noncomplete graphs having or not having hanging vertices. In particular, for p = 2 the edge deleted graphs are considered. The motivation of these problems comes from [2] and [6], where the authors, among other things, gave the lower and upper bounds on irredundance, independence and domination numbers...
A set S of vertices of a graph G = (V,E) is a dominating set if every vertex of V-S is adjacent to some vertex in S. The domination number γ(G) is the minimum cardinality of a dominating set of G, and the domination subdivision number is the minimum number of edges that must be subdivided (each edge in G can be subdivided at most once) in order to increase the domination number. Arumugam conjectured that for any graph G. We give a counterexample to this conjecture. On the other hand, we show...
For a graphical property and a graph , a subset of vertices of is a -set if the subgraph induced by has the property . The domination number with respect to the property , is the minimum cardinality of a dominating -set. In this paper we present results on changing and unchanging of the domination number with respect to the nondegenerate and hereditary properties when a graph is modified by adding an edge or deleting a vertex.
In this paper we present results on changing and unchanging of the domination number with respect to the nondegenerate property , denoted by , when a graph is modified by deleting a vertex or deleting edges. A graph is -critical if for any set with . Properties of -critical graphs are studied. The plus bondage number with respect to the property , denoted , is the cardinality of the smallest set of edges such that . Some known results for ordinary domination and bondage numbers...
In a graph a vertex is said to dominate itself and all its neighbors. A double dominating set of a graph G is a subset of vertices that dominates every vertex of G at least twice. The double domination number of G, denoted , is the minimum cardinality among all double dominating sets of G. We consider the effects of vertex removal on the double domination number of a graph. A graph G is -vertex critical graph (-vertex stable graph, respectively) if the removal of any vertex different from a support...
A path π = (v1, v2, . . . , vk+1) in a graph G = (V,E) is a downhill path if for every i, 1 ≤ i ≤ k, deg(vi) ≥ deg(vi+1), where deg(vi) denotes the degree of vertex vi ∈ V. The downhill domination number equals the minimum cardinality of a set S ⊆ V having the property that every vertex v ∈ V lies on a downhill path originating from some vertex in S. We investigate downhill domination numbers of graphs and give upper bounds. In particular, we show that the downhill domination number of a graph is...
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