Bounds for identifying codes in terms of degree parameters
The electronic journal of combinatorics, Tome 19 (2012) no. 1
An identifying code is a subset of vertices of a graph such that each vertex is uniquely determined by its neighbourhood within the identifying code. If $\gamma^{\text{ID}}(G)$ denotes the minimum size of an identifying code of a graph $G$, it was conjectured by F. Foucaud, R. Klasing, A. Kosowski and A. Raspaud that there exists a constant $c$ such that if a connected graph $G$ with $n$ vertices and maximum degree $d$ admits an identifying code, then $\gamma^{\text{ID}}(G)\leq n-\tfrac{n}{d}+c$. We use probabilistic tools to show that for any $d\geq 3$, $\gamma^{\text{ID}}(G)\leq n-\tfrac{n}{\Theta(d)}$ holds for a large class of graphs containing, among others, all regular graphs and all graphs of bounded clique number. This settles the conjecture (up to constants) for these classes of graphs. In the general case, we prove $\gamma^{\text{ID}}(G)\leq n-\tfrac{n}{\Theta(d^{3})}$. In a second part, we prove that in any graph $G$ of minimum degree $\delta$ and girth at least 5, $\gamma^{\text{ID}}(G)\leq(1+o_\delta(1))\tfrac{3\log\delta}{2\delta}n$. Using the former result, we give sharp estimates for the size of the minimum identifying code of random $d$-regular graphs, which is about $\tfrac{\log d}{d}n$.
DOI :
10.37236/2036
Classification :
05C69, 05C80, 60B99, 94B60, 94C12
Mots-clés : size of the minimum identifying code of random \(d\)-regular graphs
Mots-clés : size of the minimum identifying code of random \(d\)-regular graphs
@article{10_37236_2036,
author = {Florent Foucaud and Guillem Perarnau},
title = {Bounds for identifying codes in terms of degree parameters},
journal = {The electronic journal of combinatorics},
year = {2012},
volume = {19},
number = {1},
doi = {10.37236/2036},
zbl = {1243.05184},
url = {http://geodesic.mathdoc.fr/articles/10.37236/2036/}
}
Florent Foucaud; Guillem Perarnau. Bounds for identifying codes in terms of degree parameters. The electronic journal of combinatorics, Tome 19 (2012) no. 1. doi: 10.37236/2036
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