Certificates for properties of stability polynomials of graphs (Q405176): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 23:48, 8 July 2024

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Certificates for properties of stability polynomials of graphs
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    Certificates for properties of stability polynomials of graphs (English)
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    4 September 2014
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    Summary: A stable (or independent) set is a set of vertices where no two of the vertices in the set are adjacent. The stability polynomial \(A(G; p)\) of a graph \(G\) is the probability that a set of randomly chosen vertices is stable where the probability of each vertex being chosen is \(p\), with choices independent. This polynomial is analogous to the chromatic polynomial in a precise sense. This paper considers factorisation of stability polynomials, following work by Morgan and Farr on factorisation of the chromatic polynomial. The stability polynomial \(A(G;p)\) is said to have an s-factorisation with s-factors \(H_{1}\) and \(H_{2}\) if \(A(G; p) = A(H_{1};p) A(H_{2};p)\). This clearly occurs when \(G\) is a disjoint union of \(H_{1}\) and \(H_{2}\). We find many other cases where such factorisation occurs even when \(G\) is connected. We find 152 different s-factorisations of connected graphs of order at most 9, and two infinite families. We introduce certificates of s-factorisation to explain s-factorisations in terms of the structure of \(G\). Short certificates for s-factorisations of connected graphs of order at most 6 are found. Upper bounds for the lengths of the certificates of s-factorisations are given. We also use certificates to explain \textit{stability equivalence}, when two graphs have the same stability polynomial. We give certifications of stability equivalence for two infinite families of graphs.
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    stability polynomial
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    chromatic polynomial
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    certificate
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    stability equivalence
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    s-factorisation
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