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A graph $G(V,E)$ of order $|V|=p$ and size $|E|=q$ is called super edge-graceful if there is a bijection $f$ from $E$ to ${0,pm 1,pm 2,...,pm frac{q-1}{2}}$ when $q$ is odd and from $E$ to ${pm 1,pm 2,...,pm frac{q}{2}}$ when $q$ is even such that the induced vertex labeling $f^*$ defined by $f^*(x) = sum_{xyin E(G)}f(xy)$ over all edges $xy$ is a bijection from $V$ to ${0,pm 1,pm 2...,pm frac{p-1}{2}}$ when $p$ is odd and from $V$ to ${pm 1,pm 2,...,pm frac{p}{2}}$ when $p$ is even. indent We prove that all paths $P_n$ except $P_2$ and $P_4$ are super edge-graceful.
We investigate the number of 4-edge paths in graphs with a fixed number of vertices and edges. An asymptotically sharp upper bound is given to this quantity. The extremal construction is the quasi-star or the quasi-clique graph, depending on the edge
In 2006, Barat and Thomassen posed the following conjecture: for each tree $T$, there exists a natural number $k_T$ such that, if $G$ is a $k_T$-edge-connected graph and $|E(G)|$ is divisible by $|E(T)|$, then $G$ admits a decomposition into copies o
An edge-ordering of a graph $G=(V,E)$ is a bijection $phi:Eto{1,2,...,|E|}$. Given an edge-ordering, a sequence of edges $P=e_1,e_2,...,e_k$ is an increasing path if it is a path in $G$ which satisfies $phi(e_i)<phi(e_j)$ for all $i<j$. For a graph $
Given an integer $1leq j <n$, define the $(j)$-coloring of a $n$-dimensional hypercube $H_{n}$ to be the $2$-coloring of the edges of $H_{n}$ in which all edges in dimension $i$, $1leq i leq j$, have color $1$ and all other edges have color $2$. Chen
An edge-ordered graph is a graph with a total ordering of its edges. A path $P=v_1v_2ldots v_k$ in an edge-ordered graph is called increasing if $(v_iv_{i+1}) > (v_{i+1}v_{i+2})$ for all $i = 1,ldots,k-2$; it is called decreasing if $(v_iv_{i+1}) < (