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Partitions of some planar graphs into two linear forests

Piotr Borowiecki, Mariusz Hałuszczak (1997)

Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory

A linear forest is a forest in which every component is a path. It is known that the set of vertices V(G) of any outerplanar graph G can be partitioned into two disjoint subsets V₁,V₂ such that induced subgraphs ⟨V₁⟩ and ⟨V₂⟩ are linear forests (we say G has an (LF, LF)-partition). In this paper, we present an extension of the above result to the class of planar graphs with a given number of internal vertices (i.e., vertices that do not belong to the external face at a certain fixed embedding of...

Pattern hypergraphs.

Dvořák, Zdeněk, Kára, Jan, Král', Daniel, Pangrác, Ondřej (2010)

The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics [electronic only]

Point-distinguishing chromatic index of the union of paths

Xiang'en Chen (2014)

Czechoslovak Mathematical Journal

Let G be a simple graph. For a general edge coloring of a graph G (i.e., not necessarily a proper edge coloring) and a vertex v of G , denote by S ( v ) the set (not a multiset) of colors used to color the edges incident to v . For a general edge coloring f of a graph G , if S ( u ) S ( v ) for any two different vertices u and v of G , then we say that f is a point-distinguishing general edge coloring of G . The minimum number of colors required for a point-distinguishing general edge coloring of G , denoted by χ 0 ( G ) , is called...

Proper connection number of bipartite graphs

Jun Yue, Meiqin Wei, Yan Zhao (2018)

Czechoslovak Mathematical Journal

An edge-colored graph G is proper connected if every pair of vertices is connected by a proper path. The proper connection number of a connected graph G , denoted by pc ( G ) , is the smallest number of colors that are needed to color the edges of G in order to make it proper connected. In this paper, we obtain the sharp upper bound for pc ( G ) of a general bipartite graph G and a series of extremal graphs. Additionally, we give a proper 2 -coloring for a connected bipartite graph G having δ ( G ) 2 and a dominating cycle...

Qualgebras and knotted 3-valent graphs

Victoria Lebed (2015)

Fundamenta Mathematicae

This paper is devoted to new algebraic structures, called qualgebras and squandles. Topologically, they emerge as an algebraic counterpart of knotted 3-valent graphs, just like quandles can be seen as an "algebraization" of knots. Algebraically, they are modeled after groups with conjugation and multiplication/squaring operations. We discuss basic properties of these structures, and introduce and study the notions of qualgebra/squandle 2-cocycles and 2-coboundaries. Knotted 3-valent graph invariants...

Radio antipodal colorings of graphs

Gary Chartrand, David Erwin, Ping Zhang (2002)

Mathematica Bohemica

A radio antipodal coloring of a connected graph G with diameter d is an assignment of positive integers to the vertices of G , with x V ( G ) assigned c ( x ) , such that d ( u , v ) + | c ( u ) - c ( v ) | d for every two distinct vertices u , v of G , where d ( u , v ) is the distance between u and v in G . The radio antipodal coloring number a c ( c ) of a radio antipodal coloring c of G is the maximum color assigned to a vertex of G . The radio antipodal chromatic number a c ( G ) of G is min { a c ( c ) } over all radio antipodal colorings c of G . Radio antipodal chromatic numbers of paths...

Radio k-colorings of paths

Gary Chartrand, Ladislav Nebeský, Ping Zhang (2004)

Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory

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...

Radio k-labelings for Cartesian products of graphs

Mustapha Kchikech, Riadh Khennoufa, Olivier Togni (2008)

Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory

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 | f ( x ) - f ( y ) | k + 1 - d G ( x , y ) , for any two vertices x and y, where d G ( x , y ) is the distance between x and y in G. The radio k-chromatic number is...

Radio number for some thorn graphs

Ruxandra Marinescu-Ghemeci (2010)

Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory

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...

Radio numbers for generalized prism graphs

Paul Martinez, Juan Ortiz, Maggy Tomova, Cindy Wyels (2011)

Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory

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 Z n , s , 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...

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