pith. sign in

arxiv: 1703.09969 · v1 · pith:ICIP4RCCnew · submitted 2017-03-29 · 🧮 math.CO

Steiner trees and higher geodecity

classification 🧮 math.CO
keywords geodesicsubseteqeveryfullysubgraphthenlength-functionmathrm
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Let $G$ be a connected graph and $\ell : E(G) \to \mathbb{R}^+$ a length-function on the edges of $G$. The Steiner distance $\mathrm{sd}_G(A)$ of $A \subseteq V(G)$ within $G$ is the minimum length of a connected subgraph of $G$ containing $A$, where the length of a subgraph is the sum of the lengths of its edges. It is clear that every subgraph $H \subseteq G$, with the induced length-function $\ell|_{E(H)}$, satisfies $\mathrm{sd}_H(A) \geq \mathrm{sd}_G(A)$ for every $A \subseteq V(H)$. We call $H \subseteq G$ $k$-geodesic in $G$ if equality is attained for every $A \subseteq V(H)$ with $|A| \leq k$. A subgraph is fully geodesic if it is $k$-geodesic for every $k \in \mathbb{N}$. It is easy to construct examples of graphs $H \subseteq G$ such that $H$ is $k$-geodesic, but not $(k+1)$-geodesic, so this defines a strict hierarchy of properties. We are interested in situations in which this hierarchy collapses in the sense that if $H \subseteq G$ is $k$-geodesic, then $H$ is already fully geodesic in $G$. Our first result of this kind asserts that if $T$ is a tree and $T \subseteq G$ is 2-geodesic with respect to some length-function $\ell$, then it is fully geodesic. This fails for graphs containing a cycle. We also prove that if $C$ is a cycle and $C \subseteq G$ is 6-geodesic, then $C$ is fully geodesic. We present an example showing that the number six is indeed optimal. We then develop a structural approach towards a more general theory and present several open questions concerning the big picture underlying this phenomenon.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.