scholarly journals On $(C_n;k)$ Stable Graphs

10.37236/692 ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylwia Cichacz ◽  
Agnieszka Görlich ◽  
Magorzata Zwonek ◽  
Andrzej Żak

A graph $G$ is called $(H;k)$-vertex stable if $G$ contains a subgraph isomorphic to $H$ ever after removing any $k$ of its vertices; stab$(H;k)$ denotes the minimum size among the sizes of all $(H;k)$-vertex stable graphs. In this paper we deal with $(C_{n};k)$-vertex stable graphs with minimum size. For each $n$ we prove that stab$(C_{n};1)$ is one of only two possible values and we give the exact value for infinitely many $n$'s. Furthermore we establish an upper and lower bound for stab$(C_{n};k)$ for $k\geq 2$.

2016 ◽  
Vol 201 ◽  
pp. 14-23
Author(s):  
M. Boostan ◽  
S. Golalizadeh ◽  
N. Soltankhah
Keyword(s):  

10.37236/8376 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakub Przybyło ◽  
Andrzej Żak

A graph $G$ is called $t$-node fault tolerant with respect to $H$ if $G$ still contains a subgraph isomorphic to $H$ after removing any $t$ of its vertices. The least value of $|E(G)|-|E(H)|$ among all such graphs $G$ is denoted by $\Delta(t,H)$. We study fault tolerance with respect to some natural architectures of a computer network, i.e. the $d$-dimensional toroidal grids and the hypercubes. We provide the first non-trivial lower bounds for $\Delta(1,H)$ in these cases. For this aim we establish a general connection between the notion of fault tolerance and the size of a largest component of a graph. In particular, we give for all values of $k$ (and $n$) a lower bound on the order of the largest component of any graph obtained from $C_n\Box C_n$ via removal of $k$ of its vertices, which is in general optimal.


10.37236/511 ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gholam Reza Omidi ◽  
Ghaffar Raeisi

Let $G_1, G_2, G_3, \ldots , G_t$ be graphs. The multicolor Ramsey number $R(G_1, G_2, \ldots, G_t)$ is the smallest positive integer $n$ such that if the edges of a complete graph $K_n$ are partitioned into $t$ disjoint color classes giving $t$ graphs $H_1,H_2,\ldots,H_t$, then at least one $H_i$ has a subgraph isomorphic to $G_i$. In this paper, we provide the exact value of $R(P_{n_1}, P_{n_2},\ldots, P_{n_t},C_k)$ for certain values of $n_i$ and $k$. In addition, the exact values of $R(P_5,C_4,P_k)$, $R(P_4,C_4,P_k)$, $R(P_5,P_5,P_k)$ and $R(P_5,P_6,P_k)$ are given. Finally, we give a lower bound for $R(P_{2n_1}, P_{2n_2},\ldots, P_{2n_t})$ and we conjecture that this lower bound is the exact value of this number. Moreover, some evidence is given for this conjecture.


10.37236/6026 ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sándor Bozóki ◽  
Péter Gál ◽  
István Marosi ◽  
William D. Weakley

The queens graph $Q_{m \times n}$ has the squares of the $m \times n$ chessboard as its vertices; two squares are adjacent if they are in the same row, column, or diagonal of the board. A set $D$ of squares of $Q_{m \times n}$ is a dominating set for $Q_{m \times n}$ if every square of $Q_{m \times n}$ is either in $D$ or adjacent to a square in $D$. The minimum size of a dominating set of $Q_{m \times n}$ is the domination number, denoted by $\gamma(Q_{m \times n})$. Values of $\gamma(Q_{m \times n}), \, 4 \leq m \leq n \leq 18,\,$ are given here, in each case with a file of minimum dominating sets (often all of them, up to symmetry) in an online appendix. In these ranges for $m$ and $n$, monotonicity fails once: $\gamma(Q_{8\times 11}) = 6 > 5 = \gamma(Q_{9 \times 11}) = \gamma(Q_{10 \times 11}) = \gamma(Q_{11 \times 11})$. Let $g(m)$ [respectively $g^{*}(m)$] be the largest integer such that $m$ queens suffice to dominate the $(m+1) \times g(m)$ board [respectively, to dominate the $(m+1) \times g^{*}(m)$ board with no two queens in a row]. Starting from the elementary bound $g(m) \leq 3m$, domination when the board is far from square is investigated. It is shown (Theorem 2) that $g(m) = 3m$ can only occur when $m \equiv 0, 1, 2, 3, \mbox{or } 4 \mbox{ (mod 9)}$, with an online appendix showing that this does occur for $m \leq 40, m \neq 3$. Also (Theorem 4), if $m \equiv 5, 6, \mbox{or } 7 \mbox{ (mod 9)}$ then $g^{*}(m) \leq 3m-2$, and if $m \equiv 8 \mbox{ (mod 9)}$ then $g^{*}(m) \leq 3m-4$. It is shown that equality holds in these bounds for $m \leq 40 $. Lower bounds on $\gamma(Q_{m \times n})$ are given. In particular, if $m \leq n$ then $\gamma(Q_{m \times n}) \geq \min \{ m,\lceil (m+n-2)/4 \rceil \}$. Two types of dominating sets (orthodox covers and centrally strong sets) are developed; each type is shown to give good upper bounds of $\gamma(Q_{m \times n})$ in several cases. Three questions are posed: whether monotonicity of $\gamma(Q_{m \times n})$ holds (other than from $(m, n) = (8, 11)$ to $(9, 11)$), whether $\gamma(Q_{m \times n}) = (m+n-2)/4$ occurs with $m \leq n < 3m+2$ (other than for $(m, n) = (3, 3)$ and $(11, 11)$), and whether the lower bound given above can be improved. A set of squares is independent if no two of its squares are adjacent. The minimum size of an independent dominating set of $Q_{m \times n}$ is the independent domination number, denoted by $i(Q_{m \times n})$. Values of $i(Q_{m \times n}), \, 4 \leq m \leq n \leq 18, \,$ are given here, in each case with some minimum dominating sets. In these ranges for $m$ and $n$, monotonicity fails twice: $i(Q_{8\times 11}) = 6 > 5 = i(Q_{9 \times 11}) = i(Q_{10 \times 11}) = i(Q_{11 \times 11})$, and $i(Q_{11 \times 18}) = 9 > 8 = i(Q_{12\times 18})$.


10.37236/4136 ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Natasha Morrison ◽  
Jonathan A. Noel ◽  
Alex Scott

Given a set $X$, a collection $\mathcal{F}\subseteq\mathcal{P}(X)$ is said to be $k$-Sperner if it does not contain a chain of length $k+1$ under set inclusion and it is saturated if it is maximal with respect to this property. Gerbner et al. conjectured that, if $|X|$ is sufficiently large with respect to $k$, then the minimum size of a saturated $k$-Sperner system $\mathcal{F}\subseteq\mathcal{P}(X)$ is $2^{k-1}$. We disprove this conjecture by showing that there exists $\varepsilon>0$ such that for every $k$ and $|X| \geq n_0(k)$ there exists a saturated $k$-Sperner system $\mathcal{F}\subseteq\mathcal{P}(X)$ with cardinality at most $2^{(1-\varepsilon)k}$.A collection $\mathcal{F}\subseteq \mathcal{P}(X)$ is said to be an oversaturated $k$-Sperner system if, for every $S\in\mathcal{P}(X)\setminus\mathcal{F}$, $\mathcal{F}\cup\{S\}$ contains more chains of length $k+1$ than $\mathcal{F}$. Gerbner et al. proved that, if $|X|\geq k$, then the smallest such collection contains between $2^{k/2-1}$ and $O\left(\frac{\log{k}}{k}2^k\right)$ elements. We show that if $|X|\geq k^2+k$, then the lower bound is best possible, up to a polynomial factor.


2005 ◽  
Vol DMTCS Proceedings vol. AE,... (Proceedings) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Tarui

International audience A family $\mathcal{P} = \{\pi_1, \ldots , \pi_q\}$ of permutations of $[n]=\{1,\ldots,n\}$ is $\textit{completely}$ $k$-$\textit{scrambling}$ [Spencer, 1972; Füredi, 1996] if for any distinct $k$ points $x_1,\ldots,x_k \in [n]$, permutations $\pi_i$'s in $\mathcal{P}$ produce all $k!$ possible orders on $\pi_i (x_1),\ldots, \pi_i(x_k)$. Let $N^{\ast}(n,k)$ be the minimum size of such a family. This paper focuses on the case $k=3$. By a simple explicit construction, we show the following upper bound, which we express together with the lower bound due to Füredi for comparison. $\frac{2}{ \log _2e} \log_2 n \leq N^{\ast}(n,3) \leq 2\log_2n + (1+o(1)) \log_2 \log _2n$. We also prove the existence of $\lim_{n \to \infty} N^{\ast}(n,3) / \log_2 n = c_3$. Determining the value $c_3$ and proving the existence of $\lim_{n \to \infty} N^{\ast}(n,k) / \log_2 n = c_k$ for $k \geq 4$ remain open.


10.37236/8949 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan R. Martin ◽  
Heather C. Smith ◽  
Shanise Walker

Given a finite poset $\mathcal{P}$, a family $\mathcal{F}$ of elements in the Boolean lattice is induced-$\mathcal{P}$-saturated if $\mathcal{F}$ contains no copy of $\mathcal{P}$ as an induced subposet but every proper superset of $\mathcal{F}$ contains a copy of $\mathcal{P}$ as an induced subposet.  The minimum size of an induced-$\mathcal{P}$-saturated family in the $n$-dimensional Boolean lattice, denoted $\mathrm{sat}^*(n,\mathcal{P})$, was first studied by Ferrara et al. (2017). Our work focuses on strengthening lower bounds. For the 4-point poset known as the diamond, we prove $\mathrm{sat}^*(n,\Diamond)\geq\sqrt{n}$, improving upon a logarithmic lower bound. For the antichain with $k+1$ elements, we prove $$\mathrm{sat}^*(n,\mathcal{A}_{k+1})\geq \left(1-\frac{1}{\log_2k}\right)\frac{kn}{\log_2 k}$$ for $n$ sufficiently large, improving upon a lower bound of $3n-1$ for $k\geq 3$. 


Author(s):  
J. V. Maskowitz ◽  
W. E. Rhoden ◽  
D. R. Kitchen ◽  
R. E. Omlor ◽  
P. F. Lloyd

The fabrication of the aluminum bridge test vehicle for use in the crystallographic studies of electromigration involves several photolithographic processes, some common, while others quite unique. It is most important to start with a clean wafer of known orientation. The wafers used are 7 mil thick boron doped silicon. The diameter of the wafer is 1.5 inches with a resistivity of 10-20 ohm-cm. The crystallographic orientation is (111).Initial attempts were made to both drill and laser holes in the silicon wafers then back fill with photoresist or mounting wax. A diamond tipped dentist burr was used to successfully drill holes in the wafer. This proved unacceptable in that the perimeter of the hole was cracked and chipped. Additionally, the minimum size hole realizable was > 300 μm. The drilled holes could not be arrayed on the wafer to any extent because the wafer would not stand up to the stress of multiple drilling.


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