Location-domination and matching in cubic graphs
Abstract
A dominating set of a graph G is a set D of vertices of G such that every vertex outside D is adjacent to a vertex in D. A locating-dominating set of G is a dominating set D of G with the additional property that every two distinct vertices outside D have distinct neighbors in D; that is, for distinct vertices u and v outside D, N(u) D ≠ N(v) D where N(u) denotes the open neighborhood of u. A graph is twin-free if every two distinct vertices have distinct open and closed neighborhoods. The location-domination number of G, denoted γL(G), is the minimum cardinality of a locating-dominating set in G. Garijo, Gonzalez and Marquez [Applied Math. Computation 249 (2014), 487--501] posed the conjecture that for n sufficiently large, the maximum value of the location-domination number of a twin-free, connected graph on n vertices is equal to n2 . We propose the related (stronger) conjecture that if G is a twin-free graph of order n without isolated vertices, then γL(G)≤ n2. We prove the conjecture for cubic graphs. We rely heavily on proof techniques from matching theory to prove our result.
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.