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In this paper, we characterize the extremal digraphs with the maximal or minimal $alpha$-spectral radius among some digraph classes such as rose digraphs, generalized theta digraphs and tri-ring digraphs with given size $m$. These digraph classes are denoted by $mathcal{R}_{m}^k$, $widetilde{boldsymbol{Theta}}_k(m)$ and $INF(m)$ respectively. The main results about spectral extremal digraph by Guo and Liu in cite{MR2954483} and Li and Wang in cite{MR3777498} are generalized to $alpha$-spectral graph theory. As a by-product of our main results, an open problem in cite{MR3777498} is answered. Furthermore, we determine the digraphs with the first three minimal $alpha$-spectral radius among all strongly connected digraphs. Meanwhile, we determine the unique digraph with the fourth minimal $alpha$-spectral radius among all strongly connected digraphs for $0le alpha le frac{1}{2}$.
Visibility representation of digraphs was introduced by Axenovich, Beveridge, Hutch-inson, and West (emph{SIAM J. Discrete Math.} {bf 27}(3) (2013) 1429--1449) as a natural generalization of $t$-bar visibility representation of undirected graphs. A {
The $chi$-stability index ${rm es}_{chi}(G)$ of a graph $G$ is the minimum number of its edges whose removal results in a graph with the chromatic number smaller than that of $G$. In this paper three open problems from [European J. Combin. 84 (2020)
Let $D=(V,A)$ be an acyclic digraph. For $xin V$ define $e_{_{D}}(x)$ to be the difference of the indegree and the outdegree of $x$. An acyclic ordering of the vertices of $D$ is a one-to-one map $g: V rightarrow [1,|V|] $ that has the property that
The general position number of a graph $G$ is the size of the largest set of vertices $S$ such that no geodesic of $G$ contains more than two elements of $S$. The monophonic position number of a graph is defined similarly, but with `induced path in p
Let $F$ be a graph. A hypergraph is called Berge $F$ if it can be obtained by replacing each edge in $F$ by a hyperedge containing it. Given a family of graphs $mathcal{F}$, we say that a hypergraph $H$ is Berge $mathcal{F}$-free if for every $F in m