Cyclic near-Hamiltonian cycle decomposition of 2-fold complete graph

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raja’i Aldiabat ◽  
Haslinda Ibrahim ◽  
Sharmila Karim
2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (14) ◽  
pp. 1250132 ◽  
Author(s):  
YOUNGSIK HUH

In 1983 Conway and Gordon proved that any embedding of the complete graph K7 into ℝ3 contains at least one nontrivial knot as its Hamiltonian cycle. After their work knots (also links) are considered as intrinsic properties of abstract graphs, and numerous subsequent works have been continued until recently. In this paper, we are interested in knotted Hamiltonian cycles in linear embedding of K7. Concretely it is shown that any linear embedding of K7 contains at most three figure-8 knots.


10.37236/1204 ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Albert ◽  
Alan Frieze ◽  
Bruce Reed

The edges of the complete graph $K_n$ are coloured so that no colour appears more than $\lceil cn\rceil$ times, where $c < 1/32$ is a constant. We show that if $n$ is sufficiently large then there is a Hamiltonian cycle in which each edge is a different colour, thereby proving a 1986 conjecture of Hahn and Thomassen. We prove a similar result for the complete digraph with $c < 1/64$. We also show, by essentially the same technique, that if $t\geq 3$, $c < (2t^2(1+t))^{-1}$, no colour appears more than $\lceil cn\rceil$ times and $t|n$ then the vertices can be partitioned into $n/t$ $t-$sets $K_1,K_2,\ldots,K_{n/t}$ such that the colours of the $n(t-1)/2$ edges contained in the $K_i$'s are distinct. The proof technique follows the lines of Erdős and Spencer's modification of the Local Lemma.


10.37236/1898 ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey H. Dinitz ◽  
Peter Dukes ◽  
Douglas R. Stinson

In this paper, we consider a weakening of the definitions of uniform and perfect one-factorizations of the complete graph. Basically, we want to order the $2n-1$ one-factors of a one-factorization of the complete graph $K_{2n}$ in such a way that the union of any two (cyclically) consecutive one-factors is always isomorphic to the same two-regular graph. This property is termed sequentially uniform; if this two-regular graph is a Hamiltonian cycle, then the property is termed sequentially perfect. We will discuss several methods for constructing sequentially uniform and sequentially perfect one-factorizations. In particular, we prove for any integer $n \geq 1$ that there is a sequentially perfect one-factorization of $K_{2n}$. As well, for any odd integer $m \geq 1$, we prove that there is a sequentially uniform one-factorization of $K_{2^t m}$ of type $(4,4,\dots,4)$ for all integers $t \geq 2 + \lceil \log_2 m \rceil$ (where type $(4,4,\dots,4)$ denotes a two-regular graph consisting of disjoint cycles of length four).


2015 ◽  
Vol Vol. 17 no. 1 (Graph Theory) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adel Alahmadi ◽  
Robert E. L. Aldred ◽  
Ahmad Alkenani ◽  
Rola Hijazi ◽  
P. Solé ◽  
...  

Graph Theory International audience Ruskey and Savage conjectured that in the d-dimensional hypercube, every matching M can be extended to a Hamiltonian cycle. Fink verified this for every perfect matching M, remarkably even if M contains external edges. We prove that this property also holds for sparse spanning regular subgraphs of the cubes: for every d ≥7 and every k, where 7 ≤k ≤d, the d-dimensional hypercube contains a k-regular spanning subgraph such that every perfect matching (possibly with external edges) can be extended to a Hamiltonian cycle. We do not know if this result can be extended to k=4,5,6. It cannot be extended to k=3. Indeed, there are only three 3-regular graphs such that every perfect matching (possibly with external edges) can be extended to a Hamiltonian cycle, namely the complete graph on 4 vertices, the complete bipartite 3-regular graph on 6 vertices and the 3-cube on 8 vertices. Also, we do not know if there are graphs of girth at least 5 with this matching-extendability property.


2004 ◽  
Vol 279 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 107-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Buratti ◽  
Alberto Del Fra

10.37236/117 ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Hefetz ◽  
Sebastian Stich

We consider the fair Hamiltonian cycle Maker-Breaker game, played on the edge set of the complete graph $K_n$ on $n$ vertices. It is known that Maker wins this game if $n$ is sufficiently large. We are interested in the minimum number of moves needed for Maker in order to win the Hamiltonian cycle game, and in the smallest $n$ for which Maker has a winning strategy for this game. We prove the following results: (1) If $n$ is sufficiently large, then Maker can win the Hamiltonian cycle game within $n+1$ moves. This bound is best possible and it settles a question of Hefetz, Krivelevich, Stojaković and Szabó; (2) If $n \geq 29$, then Maker can win the Hamiltonian cycle game. This improves the previously best bound of $600$ due to Papaioannou.


2008 ◽  
Vol 308 (12) ◽  
pp. 2440-2449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather Jordon ◽  
Joy Morris

1975 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 763-765 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Zaks

Let V(G) and E(G) denote the vertex set and the edge set of a graph G; let Kn denote the complete graph with n vertices and let Kn, m denote the complete bipartite graph on n and m vertices. A Hamiltonian cycle (Hamiltonian path, respectively) in a graph G is a cycle (path, respectively) in G that contains all the vertices of G.


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