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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 {it $t$-bar visibility representation} of a digraph $G$ assigns each vertex at most $t$ horizontal bars in the plane so that there is an arc $xy$ in the digraph if and only if some bar for $x$ sees some bar for $y$ above it along an unblocked vertical strip with positive width. The {it visibility number} $b(G)$ is the least $t$ such that $G$ has a $t$-bar visibility representation. In this paper, we solve several problems about $b(G)$ posed by Axenovich et al. and prove that determining whether the bar visibility number of a digraph is $2$ is NP-complete.
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
A $t$-bar visibility representation of a graph assigns each vertex up to $t$ horizontal bars in the plane so that two vertices are adjacent if and only if some bar for one vertex can see some bar for the other via an unobstructed vertical channel of
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
In 1965, Motzkin and Straus [5] provided a new proof of Turans theorem based on a continuous characterization of the clique number of a graph using the Lagrangian of a graph. This new proof aroused interests in the study of Lagrangians of r-uniform g
Given a proper edge coloring $varphi$ of a graph $G$, we define the palette $S_{G}(v,varphi)$ of a vertex $v in V(G)$ as the set of all colors appearing on edges incident with $v$. The palette index $check s(G)$ of $G$ is the minimum number of distin