Reconfiguration of Dominating Sets
Abstract
We explore a reconfiguration version of the dominating set problem, where a dominating set in a graph G is a set S of vertices such that each vertex is either in S or has a neighbour in S. In a reconfiguration problem, the goal is to determine whether there exists a sequence of feasible solutions connecting given feasible solutions s and t such that each pair of consecutive solutions is adjacent according to a specified adjacency relation. Two dominating sets are adjacent if one can be formed from the other by the addition or deletion of a single vertex. For various values of k, we consider properties of Dk(G), the graph consisting of a vertex for each dominating set of size at most k and edges specified by the adjacency relation. Addressing an open question posed by Haas and Seyffarth, we demonstrate that D(G)+1(G) is not necessarily connected, for (G) the maximum cardinality of a minimal dominating set in G. The result holds even when graphs are constrained to be planar, of bounded tree-width, or b-partite for b 3. Moreover, we construct an infinite family of graphs such that Dγ(G)+1(G) has exponential diameter, for γ(G) the minimum size of a dominating set. On the positive side, we show that Dn-m(G) is connected and of linear diameter for any graph G on n vertices having at least m+1 independent edges.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.