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Cubicity of interval graphs and the claw number
Author(s) -
Adiga Abhijin,
Chandran L. Sunil
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of graph theory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.164
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1097-0118
pISSN - 0364-9024
DOI - 10.1002/jgt.20483
Subject(s) - combinatorics , mathematics , bound graph , graph , cartesian product , graph power , interval graph , discrete mathematics , neighbourhood (mathematics) , upper and lower bounds , line graph , pathwidth , mathematical analysis
Abstract Let G ( V, E ) be a simple, undirected graph where V is the set of vertices and E is the set of edges. A b ‐dimensional cube is a Cartesian product I 1 × I 2 ×···× I b , where each I i is a closed interval of unit length on the real line. The cubicity of G , denoted by cub( G ), is the minimum positive integer b such that the vertices in G can be mapped to axis parallel b ‐dimensional cubes in such a way that two vertices are adjacent in G if and only if their assigned cubes intersect. An interval graph is a graph that can be represented as the intersection of intervals on the real line—i.e. the vertices of an interval graph can be mapped to intervals on the real line such that two vertices are adjacent if and only if their corresponding intervals overlap. Suppose S ( m ) denotes a star graph on m +1 nodes. We define claw number ψ( G ) of the graph to be the largest positive integer m such that S ( m ) is an induced subgraph of G . It can be easily shown that the cubicity of any graph is at least ⌈log 2 ψ( G )⌉. In this article, we show that for an interval graph G ⌈log 2 ψ( G )⌉⩽cub( G )⩽⌈log 2 ψ( G )⌉+2. It is not clear whether the upper bound of ⌈log 2 ψ( G )⌉+2 is tight: till now we are unable to find any interval graph with cub( G )>⌈log 2 ψ( G )⌉. We also show that for an interval graph G , cub( G )⩽⌈log 2 α⌉, where α is the independence number of G . Therefore, in the special case of ψ( G )=α, cub( G ) is exactly ⌈log 2 α 2 ⌉. The concept of cubicity can be generalized by considering boxes instead of cubes. A b ‐dimensional box is a Cartesian product I 1 × I 2 ×···× I b , where each I i is a closed interval on the real line. The boxicity of a graph, denoted box( G ), is the minimum k such that G is the intersection graph of k ‐dimensional boxes. It is clear that box( G )⩽cub( G ). From the above result, it follows that for any graph G , cub( G )⩽box( G )⌈log 2 α⌉. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Graph Theory 65: 323–333, 2010

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