Locating-dominating sets in twin-free graphs
Florent Foucaud, Michael A. Henning, Christian L\"owenstein, Thomas, Sasse

TL;DR
This paper investigates locating-dominating sets in twin-free graphs, providing bounds on their size, constructing extremal examples, and proving the conjecture for specific graph classes.
Contribution
It establishes a general upper bound of 2n/3 for the location-domination number in twin-free graphs and characterizes extremal trees, split, and co-bipartite graphs.
Findings
Proved the bound _L(G) 2n/3 for twin-free graphs.
Constructed graphs reaching the n/2 bound, supporting the conjecture.
Confirmed the conjecture for split and co-bipartite graphs.
Abstract
A locating-dominating set of a graph is a dominating set of with the additional property that every two distinct vertices outside have distinct neighbors in ; that is, for distinct vertices and outside , where denotes the open neighborhood of . A graph is twin-free if every two distinct vertices have distinct open and closed neighborhoods. The location-domination number of , denoted , is the minimum cardinality of a locating-dominating set in . It is conjectured [D. Garijo, A. Gonz\'alez and A. M\'arquez. The difference between the metric dimension and the determining number of a graph. Applied Mathematics and Computation 249 (2014), 487--501] that if is a twin-free graph of order without isolated vertices, then . We prove the general bound $\gamma_L(G)\le…
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