Efficient Domination in Cartesian product of Graphs and its Critical Aspects
Date
2021
Authors
Shet, Sujatha V.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
In a graph G = (V;E), every vertex v 2 V (G) dominates itself and its neighbors.
A set S V (G) is a dominating set of G if each vertex in V (G) is either in S or has
a neighbor in S. The domination number of G, denoted by
(G), is the cardinality of
a minimum dominating set of G. It is noted that if S is a dominating set, then the
vertices in V S may have more than one neighbor in S. Imposing the additional
constraint on a dominating set S that, each vertex in V must have exactly one neighbor
in S (inclusive of vertices in S), leads to the notion of efficient domination in graphs.
A dominating set S V (G) is an efficient dominating set (EDS) of G, if each
vertex in V (G) is either in S or has exactly one neighbor in S. A graph G is efficiently
dominatable, if it has an EDS. If S is an EDS of G, then S is also a minimum
dominating set of G, but not conversely. Thus, all efficient dominating sets have the
same cardinality, namely,
(G). Though an EDS of G has the same cardinality as its
domination number, it is noted that for a given domination number, the properties of
a graph which does not contain an EDS need not be true for an efficiently dominatable
graph. This necessitates an exclusive study of the class of efficiently dominatable
graphs. Though there is a significant amount of study in the literature related to
efficient domination, both from graph theoretical as well as algorithmic perspective, to
the best of our knowledge, it has not been much explored relative to the other domination
parameters. Further, the concept of efficient domination also finds applications
in diverse fields like coding theory, parallel computing, wireless ad hoc networks, etc.
Motivated by the applications of efficient domination and the research gap identified
in the literature, interest is shown in this thesis to study the concept of efficient domination
for an arbitrary graph and for a particular type of graph product, namely
cartesian product.
The contributions to this thesis are organized into three chapters, namely Chapter
3, 4 and 5. Chapter 3 deals with the study on Efficient domination in general/arbitrary
graphs. Some basic results on efficient domination in general graphs including some
improved bounds on domination number, efficient domination in trees and some special
classes of graphs are discussed. Further, the structural properties of graphs possessing
pairwise disjoint efficient dominating sets are studied along with an insight into the
applications of such structures in ad hoc and sensor networks.
i
Chapter 4 focuses on the concept of criticality in the class of efficiently dominatable
graphs, where the concept of criticality in general, deals with the study of the behaviour
of a graph with respect to a graph parameter, upon the removal of a vertex or a set
of vertices, removal or addition of one or more edges. The study in this chapter
is restricted to the removal of a single vertex and removal or addition of a single
edge, at a time. Based on the research gap identified in the literature, fascinated by
the applications of the concept of criticality in the design of fault-tolerant networks
and its significance in graph theory, the study is initiated with respect to efficient
domination. A vertex whose removal from G alters
(G) is referred to as a critical
vertex. Similarly, an edge, whose removal from G or whose addition between a pair
of non-adjacent vertices in G alters
(G) is a critical edge. The collection of such
vertices (or edges) is a vertex (or edge) critical set. In this chapter, an attempt is
made to explore the properties of critical vertices, critical edges with respect to both
removal and addition. The vertex critical sets, edge critical sets and six classes of
graphs arising thereof are characterized. Finally, the relationship between all these
classes is identified and discussed.
Finally, Chapter 5 deals with the study of efficient domination in the cartesian
product of graphs. Here, the structural properties of the product in terms of its factors
are discussed. The initial focus is on the product of two well-known graphs,
followed by the product of an arbitrary graph G with a well-known graph. Further,
the class of efficiently dominatable product graphs G K1; p and G Kp, for some positive
integer p and an arbitrary graph G are characterized. The problem of deciding
whether or not a graph is efficiently dominatable is NP-complete and so also, for the
the products mentioned above. So, an attempt is made to design exact exponential
time algorithms, to determine whether the products are efficiently dominatable or not.
The study is also extended to Hamming graphs.
Description
Keywords
Department of Mathematical and Computational Sciences, Efficient domination, Efficient domination number, 2-packing, Independent perfect domination, perfect 1-codes, perfect 1-domination, Efficiently dominatable trees, Changing efficient domination, Unchanging efficient domination, Cartesian product, Hamming graphs