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0 votes
0 answers
19 views

2-regular directed graphs where the commutative property or relation holds at every vertex and abelian Cayley digraphs

2-regular directed graphs where the commutative property or relation holds at every vertex and abelian Cayley digraphs. You are given a 2 regular (2-in 2-out) directed graph where you can check that ...
1 vote
0 answers
60 views

Bipartite Representation of a Directed Graph

I am working on a combinatorial optimization problem and have constructed a bipartite graph as a representation of a directed graph. The construction is as follows: Given an initial directed graph $G$ ...
3 votes
1 answer
283 views

Latent Dirichlet allocation and properties of digamma function

In the paper Blei, D. M., Ng, A. Y., & Jordan, M. I. (2003). Latent Dirichlet Allocation. Journal of Machine Learning Research, 3(4–5), 993–1022. http://www.jmlr.org/papers/volume3/blei03a/blei03a....
3 votes
2 answers
2k views

Proving that every strongly connected tournament T on at least 4 vertices contains distinct vertices u, v such that T-u and T-v are strongly connected

I have a two part question: Is there a simple proof that every strongly connected tournament $T$ on $n\geq 4$ vertices contains distinct $u,v\in V(T)$ such that $T-u$ and $T-v$ are strongly connected?...
2 votes
1 answer
1k views

Algorithms for rooted directed acyclic graph isomorphism

Given two directed acyclic graphs $G_1$ and $G_2$, and their roots $r_1$ and $r_2$, is there a polynomial algorithm to determine if $G_1$ and $G_2$ are isomorphic?
5 votes
1 answer
386 views

Are directed graphs with out-degree exactly 2 strongly connected with probability 1?

Consider a directed graph with out-degree exactly two with $n$ vertices $v_1, v_2 \cdots v_n$ that is constructed as follows: For each vertex $v_i$, one chooses uniformly at random two (not ...
0 votes
0 answers
36 views

A class of directed graph, when their minimal polynomial of the adjacency matrix matches the characteristic polynomial

We consider an unweighted directed simple graph, $G$, with a Hamiltonian cycle. Q. Assume that the adjacency matrix of $G$ is non-singular. Do the characteristic and minimal polynomials of the ...
1 vote
2 answers
198 views

Topology of directed graph $G$ with non-singular adjacency matrix

Given a directed graph $G$ with non-singular adjacency matrix, Q. Is there a directed subgraph $H$ in $G$ that can be represented as the union of disjoint cycles such that $H$ contains all nodes of $...
13 votes
1 answer
8k views

How can you compute the number of topological sorts in a DAG?

If you have a directed acyclic graph (DAG) $G$, a topological sort is just an ordering of the vertices such that if an edge $x \to y$ exists in $G$, then the index of $x$ is less than the index of $y$....
1 vote
1 answer
182 views

Lower bound on outdegree/indegree in oriented graph to guarantee cycle of length at least $k$

An oriented graph is a digraph without any self-loops, multiple arcs, or 2-cycles. What is the smallest minimum outdegree of an oriented graph on $n$ vertices that ensures there will always be a cycle ...
2 votes
1 answer
228 views

Name for generalization of trees to digraphs

One definition of tree in graph theory could be as follows: A tree is a(n undirected) graph for which there is a unique (undirected) path between any pair of vertices. This suggest a possible ...
3 votes
1 answer
173 views

Subset of the vertices in a tournament

Suppose we have a directed complete graph. Can we always find a subset $S\neq \emptyset$ of the vertices such that for every vertex $v$, $v$ has incoming edge from at least $\dfrac{|S|}{2}$ of the ...
0 votes
0 answers
51 views

Kernel perfection in some powers of cycles

Suppose I orient the edges of the power of cycle graph $G=C_n^k$ where $n=16$ and $k=4$ in such a way that all the generated cycles by the elements $1,2,3,4$ are given the standard lexical orientation....
1 vote
0 answers
145 views

Misunderstanding the definition of kernel in digraphs

By Borodin–Kostochka–Woodall '97 paper, the first paragraph says that directed odd cycles do not have kernels. But, I don't get this. Like, consider any $\lfloor\frac{n}{2}\rfloor$ set of independent ...
8 votes
0 answers
459 views

Extension of Erdős-Gallai (s,t)-path theorem to directed graphs

The following is a result of Erdős-Gallai from 1959 (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02024498): Given a 2-connected undirected unweighted graph with minimum degree at least $d$, for every ...
11 votes
5 answers
2k views

Which directed graphs have a normal adjacency matrix?

I am working on a problem in matrix analysis and I am looking for certain types of normal matrices. I suspect that these "special" normal matrices arise as adjacency matrices of certain graphs. My ...
0 votes
0 answers
59 views

Maximal family of cycles in directed 3-regular graphs

Consider a finite directed 3-regular graph $G=(V,E)$ where $(v,w)\in E$ implies also that $(w,v)\in E$. I am looking for a maximal set $\mathcal{C}$ of simple cycles of length greater of equal $3$ ...
9 votes
2 answers
363 views

Does a strong digraph always admit a vertex that lies on some path between $\Theta(n^2)$ pairs of vertices?

Let $G$ be a directed graph. Call a vertex $v$ in $G$ central if there exists $\Theta(n^2)$ distinct pairs of vertices $(u,w)$ such that $v$ lies on some path from $u$ to $w$. We do not care whether ...
15 votes
3 answers
613 views

Maximum matching in a graph with no "shortcuts"

For a directed acyclic graph (DAG) $G$, denote by $G^\star$ the undirected graph obtained from $G$ by ignoring direction of its arcs. Let $e(G)=e(G^\star)$ be the number of arcs in $G$ (or edges in $G^...
1 vote
1 answer
110 views

Distance pairs in labeled directed graph

Suppose we have a simple directed graph with $n$ nodes and $m$ edges, and we label each edge from $1$ to $m$ (with distinct labels). Define the weighted "length" of a directed path to be the maximum ...
1 vote
1 answer
143 views

Eigenvalues of directed graph with one outward edge for each vertex

I am concerned with unweighted directed graphs where each node contains exactly one edge pointing to another node, which could be itself. In other words, each row of the adjacency matrix contains one ...
3 votes
1 answer
103 views

Minimal digraph covering with no 2-path edge sets is of size $\left( 1 + o \left( 1 \right) \right) \log_2 \chi(G)$

The last problem in 2022 IMC Day 1 strongly correlates with graph theory. In its official solution, the fundamental approach can be rephrased as follows. Give a digraph $G=(V,E)$. We call a subset of ...
3 votes
1 answer
108 views

Digraph without "immediately isomorphic" vertices?

Say that a digraph $(V,E)$ is reducible if there exist $x,y\in V$ with $x\ne y$ and such that for all $z\in V$, $(x,z)\in E\leftrightarrow(y,z)\in E$ and $(z,x)\in E\leftrightarrow(z,y)\in E$. It is ...
1 vote
1 answer
216 views

Explicit upper bound on the number of simple rooted directed graphs on 𝑛 vertices?

Harary mentioned this problem in "The number of linear, directed, rooted, and connected graphs" on p. 455, l. 3–5, but a short and crisp upper bound is missing. I believe that someone must ...
1 vote
2 answers
107 views

Minimum edge-weighted directed subgraph in polynomial time

I am looking for an algorithm with polynomial complexity where, given a strongly connected edge-weighted digraph I can find the minimal subgraph which connects some root vertex v to a known set of ...
6 votes
0 answers
218 views

Maximum number of Hamilton paths in a tournament on $n$ vertices

Recall that a tournament is a directed graph $T$ such that for every pair of distinct vertices $\{v,w\}$, exactly one of the ordered pairs $(v,w)$, $(w,v)$ is an arc of $T$. A tournament is strongly ...
12 votes
1 answer
2k views

The number of Hamiltonian paths in a tournament

If $h(T)$ denotes the number of (directed) Hamiltonian paths in the tournament $T,$ what is the range of $h(T)$ as $T$ ranges over all (finite) tournaments $T$? By a classical theorem of Rédei (...
1 vote
0 answers
65 views

Partitioning antidirected trees with bounded degree, such that the graph induced by the partition is a constant antidirected tree

Given a partition of the vertices of a graph, we can define an auxiliary graph which conveys information about the edges between sets of the partition. This defines a graph with vertex set equal to ...
1 vote
0 answers
50 views

Reference for a lemma on acyclic subgraph

Lemma. Let $D$ be a digraph. Then there exists an acyclic subdigraph $D'$ of $D$ such that the total degree (i.e. out-degree plus in-degree) of $v$ in $D'$ is at least the out-degree of $v$ in $D$ for ...
4 votes
0 answers
59 views

Graph-class defined by matrix-like vertex-operations

Let $m$ be a positive integer. We define a (directed) graph on $m(m-1)$ vertices $$V = \bigl\{(i,j) \mid i \ne j,\, i,j\in\{1,\dots,m\}\bigr\}$$ and edges as follows: $(i,j) \in V$ is adjacent (...
3 votes
1 answer
374 views

Convergence on iterating a piecewise function

Given the four functions $P_1$, $P_2$, $N_1$ and $N_2$ (which together is a piecewise function) each with domain and range as shown above: Is there an explanation as to why starting at any integer (...
1 vote
2 answers
1k views

Is there a formula for the number of st-dags (DAG with 1 source and 1 sink) with n vertices?

I am looking at doing some basic validation on a database of st-dags. It would be useful to have: A formula for the number of non-isomorphic st-dags with n vertices A formula for the same with n ...
0 votes
0 answers
125 views

Are there any necessary conditions of the existence of a Hamiltonian cycle on directed graphs

I'm trying to prove that one concrete directed graph has no Hamiltonian cycle, but didn't seem to find any relevant theorems
2 votes
1 answer
156 views

Directed version of this lemma

On a paper by Shoham Letzter, available Here, there's a lemma that says as follows: Lemma 0: For every graph $G$, there exist two disjoint sets $U,W\subseteq V(G)$ of equal size, such that there are ...
4 votes
1 answer
273 views

Dominating sets in subtournaments of the Paley tournament

For a tournament $T$, let $\mathrm{dom}(T)$ be the order of a smallest dominating set in $T$. Let $q$ be a prime power congruent to 3 mod 4 and let $T_q$ be the Paley tournament on $q$ vertices. Is ...
6 votes
0 answers
130 views

Minimum of sums over degree products in a directed acyclic graph

My problem is the following: we have a graph $ G=(V,E)$. Having a total ordering $ \eta $ of the nodes, we give a direction to the edges such that $ (u,v) $ is directed from $u$ to $v$ iif $ \eta(u) &...
4 votes
0 answers
251 views

Blocking directed paths on a DAG with a linear number of vertex defects

Let $G=(V,E)$ be a directed acyclic graph. Define the set of all directed paths in $G$ by $\Gamma$. Given a subset $W\subseteq V$, let $\Gamma_W\subseteq \Gamma$ be the set of all paths in $\Gamma$ ...
1 vote
0 answers
82 views

Name for a directed acyclic graph with no skip-level edges?

I'm looking at a specific class of DAGs, namely those DAGs such that any path from $u$ to $v$ has the same length. Informally, we don't allow "skip-level" edges. I understand these graphs ...
1 vote
0 answers
158 views

Infinite recursive graphs and different ways to build them

I asked this question one week ago on MSE and has received no answer. Infinite directed graphs (graphs with countably many nodes and edges) have a number of different applications. They can be ...
3 votes
2 answers
233 views

Digraphs with exactly one Eulerian tour

I’ve been thinking about the following problem from Richard Stanley’s list of bijective proof problems (2009). There, this problem is said to lack a combinatorial solution. The problem is the ...
1 vote
0 answers
108 views

Kernel perfect orientations of complete graphs

How can we create a kernel perfect orientation of a complete graph? A kernel of a graph is a set of vertices in a graph $G$, which absorbs other vertices, that is, has all the vertices in its ...
16 votes
1 answer
696 views

A counterexample to a conjecture of Nash-Williams about hamiltonicity of digraphs?

Maybe I am missing something, but found potential counterexample to a conjecture of Nash-Williams. According to HAMILTONIAN DEGREE SEQUENCES IN DIGRAPHS The outdegree and indegree sequences of ...
6 votes
1 answer
610 views

Directed graph minor theorems

In proving the graph minor theorem, Robertson and Seymour proved a stronger statement, namely that the directed graph minor theorem is true, using the definition A directed graph is a minor of ...
0 votes
1 answer
102 views

Has it already been shown that a digraph is $k$-connected if and only if there is a set of $k$ disjoint paths between every pair of vertices? [closed]

My question concerns graph theory. There is a conjecture I know to be true, but I am not sure whether it has been proven before. It is a fairly simple result. It may be well-known; I am not sure. ...
1 vote
0 answers
223 views

Expected number of directed cycle in a directed complete graph

Consider the randomized, directed complete graph G = (V, E) where for each pair of vertices u, v ∈ V, we add either the directed edge (u → v) or the directed edge (v → u) chosen uniformly at random. ...
10 votes
0 answers
438 views

When does a graph have a minimally strong orientation?

Given an asymmetric relation $A\subseteq V^2$ a digraph $D=(V,A)$ is minimally strong iff $D$ is strongly connected and for all arcs $\alpha\in A$ the digraph $D−\alpha=(V,A\setminus\{\alpha\})$ is ...
3 votes
0 answers
346 views

Terminology for transforming a directed acyclic graph into a tree

I am looking for the term of converting a directed acyclic graph (DAG) into a tree by traversing its topologically ordered nodes and copying the subtrees of the nodes with in-degree $> 1$. Such a ...
2 votes
0 answers
203 views

Discrete version of Helmholtz decomposition

In The curl of graphs and networks (Gustafson and Haray, 1984) it is claimed to be shown that any digraph $G$ can be decomposed as the sum of three graphs $U_1 + U_2 + U_3$, where $U_1$ is divergence-...
1 vote
1 answer
96 views

Infinite directed paths in tournaments on $\omega$

Does every tournament on $\omega$ contain an infinite directed path that doesn't visit any vertex twice?
10 votes
1 answer
370 views

When does a graph have a circular orientation? Or equivalently can anyone help me characterize this particular class of $3$-colorable perfect graphs?

Call an oriented digraph $D=(V,A)$ circular when for all $\small x,y,z\in V$ if $(x,y)\in A$ and $(y,z)\in A$ then $(z,x)\in A$ or equivalently if $D$ is any oriented digraph whose arc set is a ...