Long cycles, degree sums and neighborhood unions (Q1309446): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 12:01, 22 May 2024

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Long cycles, degree sums and neighborhood unions
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    Long cycles, degree sums and neighborhood unions (English)
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    4 July 1994
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    Let \(\sigma_ 3\) denote the minimum degree sum of any 3 pairwise nonadjacent vertices. Let \(\text{NC}_ k\) be the minimum number of vertices in a neighborhood union of any \(k\) pairwise nonadjacent vertices. The authors show that every 1-tough graph of order \(n \geq 3\) with \(\sigma_ 3 \geq n+r\) has a cycle of length at least \(\min \{n,n+\text{NC}_{r+5+\varepsilon (n+r)} (G)-\alpha(G)\}\), where \(\varepsilon (i)=0,2\), or 1, accordingly as \(i \equiv 0,1\) or \(2 \pmod 3\), respectively. They also prove that if \(G\) is a 1-tough graph of order \(n \geq 3\) with \(\sigma_ 3 \geq n+r\) and \(n\geq 8t-6r-17\) then \(G\) has a cycle of length at least \(\min \{n,2 \text{NC}_ t(G)\}\). Similar results hold for 2-connected graphs.
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    longest cycles
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    hamiltonian cycles
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    neighborhood union
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    1-tough graph
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