Almost all trees have tribe number 2 or 3 (Q1897446)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: Almost all trees have tribe number 2 or 3 |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 790561
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| default for all languages | No label defined |
||
| English | Almost all trees have tribe number 2 or 3 |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 790561 |
Statements
Almost all trees have tribe number 2 or 3 (English)
0 references
27 August 1995
0 references
For a fixed \(\varepsilon\leq 1/2\), the tribe number \(t_T(\varepsilon)\) of \(T\) is defined as the smallest integer \(r\), such that for every vertex \(v\) in \(T\), the forest obtained from deleting \(v\) from \(T\) contains a collection of at most \(r\) trees that contain together more than \((1- \varepsilon)n\) vertices (\(n\) denoting the number of vertices of \(T\)). The tribe number of a tree can be arbitrarily large. However, as is shown in this paper, almost every tree has tribe number 2 or 3 (with respect to any fixed \(\varepsilon\leq 1/2\)).
0 references
tribe number
0 references
forest
0 references
tree
0 references
0.7472374439239502
0 references
0.7127238512039185
0 references
0.7002053260803223
0 references
0.697062611579895
0 references