Girth, minimum degree, independence, and broadcast independence
Abstract
An independent broadcast on a connected graph G is a function f:V(G) N0 such that, for every vertex x of G, the value f(x) is at most the eccentricity of x in G, and f(x)>0 implies that f(y)=0 for every vertex y of G within distance at most f(x) from x. The broadcast independence number αb(G) of G is the largest weight Σx∈ V(G)f(x) of an independent broadcast f on G. It is known that α(G)≤ αb(G)≤ 4α(G) for every connected graph G, where α(G) is the independence number of G. If G has girth g and minimum degree δ, we show that αb(G)≤ 2α(G) provided that g≥ 6 and δ≥ 3 or that g≥ 4 and δ≥ 5. Furthermore, we show that, for every positive integer k, there is a connected graph G of girth at least k and minimum degree at least k such that αb(G)≥ 2(1-1k)α(G). Our results imply that lower bounds on the girth and the minimum degree of a connected graph G can lower the fraction αb(G)α(G) from 4 below 2, but not any further.