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We prove that for $k in mathbb{N}$ and $d leq 2k+2$, if a graph has maximum average degree at most $2k + frac{2d}{d+k+1}$, then $G$ decomposes into $k+1$ pseudoforests, where one of the pseudoforests has all connected components having at most $d$ edges.
A graph is locally irregular if any pair of adjacent vertices have distinct degrees. A locally irregular decomposition of a graph $G$ is a decomposition $mathcal{D}$ of $G$ such that every subgraph $H in mathcal{D}$ is locally irregular. A graph is s
Given a graph $G$, a decomposition of $G$ is a partition of its edges. A graph is $(d, h)$-decomposable if its edge set can be partitioned into a $d$-degenerate graph and a graph with maximum degree at most $h$. For $d le 4$, we are interested in the
For a real constant $alpha$, let $pi_3^alpha(G)$ be the minimum of twice the number of $K_2$s plus $alpha$ times the number of $K_3$s over all edge decompositions of $G$ into copies of $K_2$ and $K_3$, where $K_r$ denotes the complete graph on $r$ ve
A graph $G$ is called interval colorable if it has a proper edge coloring with colors $1,2,3,dots$ such that the colors of the edges incident to every vertex of $G$ form an interval of integers. Not all graphs are interval colorable; in fact, quite f
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