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For a given graph $G(V,E)$ and one of its dominating set $S$, the subgraph $Gleft[Sright]$ induced by $S$ is a called a dominating tree if $Gleft[Sright]$ is a tree. Not all graphs has a dominating tree, we will show that a graph without cut vertices has at least one dominating tree. Analogously, if $Gleft[Sright]$ is a forest, then it is called a dominating forest. As special structures of graphs, dominating tree and dominating forest have many interesting application, and we will focus on its application on the problem of planar graph coloring.
For the four-color theorem that has been developed over one and half centuries, all people believe it right but without complete proof convincing all1-3. Former proofs are to find the basic four-colorable patterns on a planar graph to reduce a map co
We show that there is no deterministic local algorithm (constant-time distributed graph algorithm) that finds a $(7-epsilon)$-approximation of a minimum dominating set on planar graphs, for any positive constant $epsilon$. In prior work, the best low
Even though flt is a number theoretic result we prove that the result depends on the topological as well as the field structure of the underlying space.
The purpose of these notes is to present a fairly complete proof of the classification Theorem for compact surfaces. Other presentations are often quite informal (see the references in Chapter V) and we have tried to be more rigorous. Our main source
We study the rank N magnificent four theory, which is the supersymmetric localization of U(N) super-Yang-Mills theory with matter (a super-group U(N|N) gauge theory) on a Calabi-Yau fourfold. Our theory contains the higher rank Donaldson-Thomas theor