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Let $G$ be a graph and $tau$ be an assignment of nonnegative integer thresholds to the vertices of $G$. A subset of vertices $D$ is said to be a $tau$-dynamic monopoly, if $V(G)$ can be partitioned into subsets $D_0, D_1, ldots, D_k$ such that $D_0=D$ and for any $iin {0, ldots, k-1}$, each vertex $v$ in $D_{i+1}$ has at least $tau(v)$ neighbors in $D_0cup ldots cup D_i$. Denote the size of smallest $tau$-dynamic monopoly by $dyn_{tau}(G)$ and the average of thresholds in $tau$ by $overline{tau}$. We show that the values of $dyn_{tau}(G)$ over all assignments $tau$ with the same average threshold is a continuous set of integers. For any positive number $t$, denote the maximum $dyn_{tau}(G)$ taken over all threshold assignments $tau$ with $overline{tau}leq t$, by $Ldyn_t(G)$. In fact, $Ldyn_t(G)$ shows the worst-case value of a dynamic monopoly when the average threshold is a given number $t$. We investigate under what conditions on $t$, there exists an upper bound for $Ldyn_{t}(G)$ of the form $c|G|$, where $c<1$. Next, we show that $Ldyn_t(G)$ is coNP-hard for planar graphs but has polynomial-time solution for forests.
Let $G$ be a graph and ${mathcal{tau}}: V(G)rightarrow Bbb{N}cup {0}$ be an assignment of thresholds to the vertices of $G$. A subset of vertices $D$ is said to be a dynamic monopoly corresponding to $(G, tau)$ if the vertices of $G$ can be partition
A consequence of Ores classic theorem characterizing the maximal graphs with given order and diameter is a determination of the largest such graphs. We give a very short and simple proof of this smaller result, based on a well-known elementary observation.
We study the $F$-decomposition threshold $delta_F$ for a given graph $F$. Here an $F$-decomposition of a graph $G$ is a collection of edge-disjoint copies of $F$ in $G$ which together cover every edge of $G$. (Such an $F$-decomposition can only exist
Let $G$ be a directed graph such that the in-degree of any vertex $G$ is at least one. Let also ${mathcal{tau}}: V(G)rightarrow Bbb{N}$ be an assignment of thresholds to the vertices of $G$. A subset $M$ of vertices of $G$ is called a dynamic monopol
A rainbow matching in an edge-colored graph is a matching in which no two edges have the same color. The color degree of a vertex v is the number of different colors on edges incident to v. Kritschgau [Electron. J. Combin. 27(2020)] studied the exist