scholarly journals On Essentially 4-Edge-Connected Cubic Bricks

10.37236/8594 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nishad Kothari ◽  
Marcelo H. De Carvalho ◽  
Cláudio L. Lucchesi ◽  
Charles H. C. Little

Lovász (1987) proved that every matching covered graph $G$ may be uniquely decomposed into a list of bricks (nonbipartite) and braces (bipartite); we let $b(G)$ denote the number of bricks. An edge $e$ is removable if $G-e$ is also matching covered; furthermore, $e$ is $b$-invariant if $b(G-e)=1$, and $e$ is quasi-$b$-invariant if $b(G-e)=2$. (Each edge of the Petersen graph is quasi-$b$-invariant.) A brick $G$ is near-bipartite if it has a pair of edges $\{e,f\}$ so that $G-e-f$ is matching covered and bipartite; such a pair $\{e,f\}$ is a removable doubleton. (Each of $K_4$ and the triangular prism $\overline{C_6}$ has three removable doubletons.) Carvalho, Lucchesi and Murty (2002) proved a conjecture of Lovász which states that every brick, distinct from $K_4$, $\overline{C_6}$ and the Petersen graph, has a $b$-invariant edge. A cubic graph is essentially $4$-edge-connected if it is $2$-edge-connected and if its only $3$-cuts are the trivial ones; it is well-known that each such graph is either a brick or a brace; we provide a graph-theoretical proof of this fact. We prove that if $G$ is any essentially $4$-edge-connected cubic brick then its edge-set may be partitioned into three (possibly empty) sets: (i) edges that participate in a removable doubleton, (ii) $b$-invariant edges, and (iii) quasi-$b$-invariant edges; our Main Theorem states that if $G$ has two adjacent quasi-$b$-invariant edges, say $e_1$ and $e_2$, then either $G$ is the Petersen graph or the (near-bipartite) Cubeplex graph, or otherwise, each edge of $G$ (distinct from $e_1$ and $e_2$) is $b$-invariant. As a corollary, we deduce that each essentially $4$-edge-connected cubic non-near-bipartite brick $G$, distinct from the Petersen graph, has at least $|V(G)|$ $b$-invariant edges.

10.37236/8945 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fuliang Lu ◽  
Xing Feng ◽  
Yan Wang

A brick is a  non-bipartite matching covered graph without non-trivial tight cuts. Bricks are building blocks of matching covered graphs. We say that an edge $e$ in a brick $G$ is $b$-invariant if $G-e$ is matching covered and a tight cut decomposition of $G-e$ contains exactly one brick. A 2-edge-connected cubic graph is essentially 4-edge-connected if it does not contain nontrivial 3-cuts. A brick $G$ is near-bipartite if it has a pair of edges $\{e_1, e_2\}$ such that $G-\{e_1,e_2\}$ is bipartite and matching covered. Kothari, de Carvalho, Lucchesi  and Little proved that each essentially 4-edge-connected cubic non-near-bipartite brick $G$, distinct from the Petersen graph, has at least $|V(G)|$ $b$-invariant edges. Moreover, they made a conjecture: every essentially 4-edge-connected cubic near-bipartite brick $G$, distinct from $K_4$, has at least $|V(G)|/2$ $b$-invariant edges. We confirm the conjecture in this paper. Furthermore, all the essentially 4-edge-connected cubic near-bipartite bricks, the numbers of $b$-invariant edges of which attain the lower bound, are presented.


10.37236/2239 ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomáš Kaiser ◽  
Jean-Sébastien Sereni ◽  
Zelealem B. Yilma

A permutation graph is a cubic graph admitting a 1-factor $M$ whose complement consists of two chordless cycles. Extending results of Ellingham and of Goldwasser and Zhang, we prove that if $e$ is an edge of $M$ such that every 4-cycle containing an edge of $M$ contains $e$, then $e$ is contained in a subdivision of the Petersen graph of a special type. In particular, if the graph is cyclically 5-edge-connected, then every edge of $M$ is contained in such a subdivision. Our proof is based on a characterization of cographs in terms of twin vertices. We infer a linear lower bound on the number of Petersen subdivisions in a permutation graph with no 4-cycles, and give a construction showing that this lower bound is tight up to a constant factor.


10.37236/3969 ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Lukoťka ◽  
Edita Máčajová ◽  
Ján Mazák ◽  
Martin Škoviera

We estimate the minimum number of vertices of a cubic graph with given oddness and cyclic connectivity. We prove that a bridgeless cubic graph $G$ with oddness $\omega(G)$ other than the Petersen graph has at least $5.41\, \omega(G)$ vertices, and for each integer $k$ with $2\le k\le 6$ we construct an infinite family of cubic graphs with cyclic connectivity $k$ and small oddness ratio $|V(G)|/\omega(G)$. In particular, for cyclic connectivity $2$, $4$, $5$, and $6$ we improve the upper bounds on the oddness ratio of snarks to $7.5$, $13$, $25$, and $99$ from the known values $9$, $15$, $76$, and $118$, respectively. In addition, we construct a cyclically $4$-connected snark of girth $5$ with oddness $4$ on $44$ vertices, improving the best previous value of $46$. Corrigendum added March 19, 2018.


10.37236/3430 ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas Hägglund

In this note we construct two infinite snark families which have high oddness and low circumference compared to the number of vertices. Using this construction, we also give a counterexample to a suggested strengthening of Fulkerson's conjecture by showing that the Petersen graph is not the only cyclically 4-edge connected cubic graph which require at least five perfect matchings to cover its edges. Furthermore the counterexample presented has the interesting property that no 2-factor can be part of a cycle double cover.


10.37236/8515 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
François Pirot ◽  
Jean-Sébastien Sereni ◽  
Riste Škrekovski

The Petersen colouring conjecture states that every bridgeless cubic graph admits an edge-colouring with 5 colours such that for every edge e, the set of colours assigned to the edges adjacent to e has cardinality either 2 or 4, but not 3. We prove that every bridgeless cubic graph $G$ admits an edge-colouring with 4 colours such that at most $8/15\cdot|E(G)|$ edges do not satisfy the above condition. This bound is tight and the Petersen graph is the only connected graph for which the bound cannot be decreased. We obtain such a 4-edge-colouring by using a carefully chosen subset of edges of a perfect matching, and the analysis relies on a simple discharging procedure with essentially no reductions and very few rules.


2011 ◽  
Vol E94-B (1) ◽  
pp. 334-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jung-Hoon KIM ◽  
Hye-Kwang KIM ◽  
Eugene RHEE ◽  
Sung-Il YANG

2020 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 219-228
Author(s):  
Ghulam Dustigeer ◽  
Haidar Ali ◽  
Muhammad Imran Khan ◽  
Yu-Ming Chu

AbstractChemical graph theory is a branch of graph theory in which a chemical compound is presented with a simple graph called a molecular graph. There are atomic bonds in the chemistry of the chemical atomic graph and edges. The graph is connected when there is at least one connection between its vertices. The number that describes the topology of the graph is called the topological index. Cheminformatics is a new subject which is a combination of chemistry, mathematics and information science. It studies quantitative structure-activity (QSAR) and structure-property (QSPR) relationships that are used to predict the biological activities and properties of chemical compounds. We evaluated the second multiplicative Zagreb index, first and second universal Zagreb indices, first and second hyper Zagreb indices, sum and product connectivity indices for the planar octahedron network, triangular prism network, hex planar octahedron network, and give these indices closed analytical formulas.


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