scholarly journals Representations of Edge Intersection Graphs of Paths in a Tree

2005 ◽  
Vol DMTCS Proceedings vol. AE,... (Proceedings) ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Charles Golumbic ◽  
Marina Lipshteyn ◽  
Michal Stern

International audience Let $\mathcal{P}$ be a collection of nontrivial simple paths in a tree $T$. The edge intersection graph of $\mathcal{P}$, denoted by EPT($\mathcal{P}$), has vertex set that corresponds to the members of $\mathcal{P}$, and two vertices are joined by an edge if the corresponding members of $\mathcal{P}$ share a common edge in $T$. An undirected graph $G$ is called an edge intersection graph of paths in a tree, if $G = EPT(\mathcal{P})$ for some $\mathcal{P}$ and $T$. The EPT graphs are useful in network applications. Scheduling undirected calls in a tree or assigning wavelengths to virtual connections in an optical tree network are equivalent to coloring its EPT graph. It is known that recognition and coloring of EPT graphs are NP-complete problems. However, the EPT graphs restricted to host trees of vertex degree 3 are precisely the chordal EPT graphs, and therefore can be colored in polynomial time complexity. We prove a new analogous result that weakly chordal EPT graphs are precisely the EPT graphs with host tree restricted to degree 4. This also implies that the coloring of the edge intersection graph of paths in a degree 4 tree is polynomial. We raise a number of intriguing conjectures regarding related families of graphs.

2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (05) ◽  
pp. 1550065 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Akbari ◽  
F. Heydari ◽  
M. Maghasedi

Let G be a group. The intersection graph of G, denoted by Γ(G), is the graph whose vertex set is the set of all nontrivial proper subgroups of G and two distinct vertices H and K are adjacent if and only if H ∩ K ≠ 1. In this paper, we show that the girth of Γ(G) is contained in the set {3, ∞}. We characterize all solvable groups whose intersection graphs are triangle-free. Moreover, we show that if G is finite and Γ(G) is triangle-free, then G is solvable. Also, we prove that if Γ(G) is a triangle-free graph, then it is a disjoint union of some stars. Among other results, we classify all abelian groups whose intersection graphs are complete. Finally, we study the intersection graphs of cyclic groups.


10.37236/3595 ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Trevor Pinto

The biclique cover number (resp. biclique partition number) of a graph $G$, $\mathrm{bc}(G$) (resp. $\mathrm{bp}(G)$), is the least number of bicliques - complete bipartite subgraphs - that are needed to cover (resp. partition) the edges of $G$.The local biclique cover number (resp. local biclique partition number)  of a graph $G$, $\mathrm{lbc}(G$) (resp. $\mathrm{lbp}(G)$), is the least $r$ such that there is a cover (resp. partition) of the edges of $G$ by bicliques with no vertex in more than $r$ of these bicliques.We show that $\mathrm{bp}(G)$ may be bounded in terms of $\mathrm{bc}(G)$, in particular, $\mathrm{bp}(G)\leq \frac{1}{2}(3^\mathrm{bc(G)}-1)$. However, the analogous result does not hold for the local measures. Indeed, in our main result, we show that $\mathrm{lbp}(G)$ can be arbitrarily large, even for graphs with $\mathrm{lbc}(G)=2$. For such graphs, $G$, we try to bound $\mathrm{lbp}(G)$ in terms of additional information about biclique covers of $G$. We both answer and leave open questions related to this.There is a well known link between biclique covers and subcube intersection graphs. We consider the problem of finding the least $r(n)$ for which every graph on $n$ vertices can be represented as a subcube intersection graph in which every subcube has dimension $r$. We reduce this problem to the much studied question of finding the least $d(n)$ such that every graph on $n$ vertices is the intersection graph of subcubes of a $d$-dimensional cube.


2001 ◽  
Vol Vol. 4 no. 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.R. Subramanian

International audience Fix positive integers k and l. Consider a random k-partite graph on n vertices obtained by partitioning the vertex set into V_i, (i=1, \ldots,k) each having size Ω (n) and choosing each possible edge with probability p. Consider any vertex x in any V_i and any vertex y. We show that the expected number of simple paths of even length l between x and y differ significantly depending on whether y belongs to the same V_i (as x does) or not. A similar phenomenon occurs when l is odd. This result holds even when k,l vary slowly with n. This fact has implications to coloring random graphs. The proof is based on establishing bijections between sets of paths.


2010 ◽  
Vol Vol. 12 no. 5 (Graph and Algorithms) ◽  
Author(s):  
C. C. Centeno ◽  
S. Dantas ◽  
M. C. Dourado ◽  
Dieter Rautenbach ◽  
Jayme Luiz Szwarcfiter

Graphs and Algorithms International audience A set C of vertices of a graph G is P(3)-convex if v is an element of C for every path uvw in G with u, w is an element of C. We prove that it is NP-complete to decide for a given graph G and a given integer p whether the vertex set of G can be partitioned into p non-empty disjoint P(3)-convex sets. Furthermore, we study such partitions for a variety of graph classes.


2005 ◽  
Vol Vol. 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nesrine Abbas ◽  
Joseph Culberson ◽  
Lorna Stewart

International audience A graph is unfrozen with respect to k independent set if it has an independent set of size k after the addition of any edge. The problem of recognizing such graphs is known to be NP-complete. A graph is maximal if the addition of one edge means it is no longer unfrozen. We designate the problem of recognizing maximal unfrozen graphs as MAX(U(k-SET)) and show that this problem is CO-NP-complete. This partially fills a gap in known complexity cases of maximal NP-complete problems, and raises some interesting open conjectures discussed in the conclusion.


Author(s):  
Mai Hoang Bien ◽  
Do Hoang Viet

Let [Formula: see text] be a field and [Formula: see text] the general linear group of degree [Formula: see text] over [Formula: see text]. The intersection graph [Formula: see text] of [Formula: see text] is a simple undirected graph whose vertex set includes all nontrivial proper subgroups of [Formula: see text]. Two vertices [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] of [Formula: see text] are adjacent if [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. In this paper, we show that if [Formula: see text] is a finite field containing at least three elements, then the diameter [Formula: see text] is [Formula: see text] or [Formula: see text]. We also classify [Formula: see text] according to [Formula: see text]. In case [Formula: see text] is infinite, we prove that [Formula: see text] is one-ended of diameter 2 and its unique end is thick.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanilson D. Santos ◽  
Jayme Szwarcfiter ◽  
Uéverton S. Souza ◽  
Claudson F. Bornstein

An EPG graph G is an edge-intersection graph of paths on a grid. In this thesis, we analyze structural characterizations and complexity aspects regarding EPG graphs. Our main focus is on the class of B1-EPG graphs whose intersection model satisfies well-known the Helly property, called Helly-B1-EPG. We show that the problem of recognizing Helly-B1-EPG graphs is NP-complete. Besides, other intersection graph classes such as VPG, EPT, and VPT were also studied. We completely solve the problem of determining the Helly and strong Helly numbers of Bk-EPG graphs and Bk-VPG graphs for each non-negative integer k. Finally, we show that every Chordal B1-EPG graph is at the intersection of VPT and EPT.


2013 ◽  
Vol 12 (04) ◽  
pp. 1250200 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. AKBARI ◽  
R. NIKANDISH ◽  
M. J. NIKMEHR

Let R be a ring with unity and I(R)* be the set of all nontrivial left ideals of R. The intersection graph of ideals of R, denoted by G(R), is a graph with the vertex set I(R)* and two distinct vertices I and J are adjacent if and only if I ∩ J ≠ 0. In this paper, we study some connections between the graph-theoretic properties of this graph and some algebraic properties of rings. We characterize all rings whose intersection graphs of ideals are not connected. Also we determine all rings whose clique number of the intersection graphs of ideals is finite. Among other results, it is shown that for a ring R, if the clique number of G(R) is finite, then the chromatic number is finite and if R is a reduced ring, then both are equal.


2014 ◽  
Vol Vol. 16 no. 3 (Graph Theory) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J. Dukes ◽  
Steve Lowdon ◽  
Gary Macgillivray

Graph Theory International audience We study partitions of the vertex set of a given graph into cells that each induce a subgraph in a given family, and for which edges can have ends in different cells only when those cells correspond to adjacent vertices of a fixed template graph H. For triangle-free templates, a general collection of graph families for which the partitioning problem can be solved in polynomial time is described. For templates with a triangle, the problem is in some cases shown to be NP-complete.


2014 ◽  
Vol Vol. 16 no. 3 (Graph Theory) ◽  
Author(s):  
Oleg Duginov

Graph Theory International audience Given a graph and a positive integer k, the biclique vertex-partition problem asks whether the vertex set of the graph can be partitioned into at most k bicliques (connected complete bipartite subgraphs). It is known that this problem is NP-complete for bipartite graphs. In this paper we investigate the computational complexity of this problem in special subclasses of bipartite graphs. We prove that the biclique vertex-partition problem is polynomially solvable for bipartite permutation graphs, bipartite distance-hereditary graphs and remains NP-complete for perfect elimination bipartite graphs and bipartite graphs containing no 4-cycles as induced subgraphs.


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