Location-domination in line graphs
Florent Foucaud, Michael A. Henning

TL;DR
This paper proves two conjectures about the size of locating-dominating and locating-total dominating sets in twin-free graphs, specifically for the class of line graphs, establishing tight bounds for these parameters.
Contribution
It confirms the conjectures for line graphs, showing these bounds hold and are tight within this class.
Findings
Proved that twin-free line graphs have locating-dominating sets at most half their order.
Established that twin-free line graphs have locating-total dominating sets at most two-thirds their order.
Identified infinitely many line graphs where these bounds are exactly met.
Abstract
A set of vertices of a graph is locating if every two distinct vertices outside have distinct neighbors in ; that is, for distinct vertices and outside , , where denotes the open neighborhood of . If is also a dominating set (total dominating set), it is called a locating-dominating set (respectively, locating-total dominating set) of . A graph is twin-free if every two distinct vertices of have distinct open and closed neighborhoods. It is conjectured [D. Garijo, A. Gonzalez and A. Marquez, The difference between the metric dimension and the determining number of a graph. Applied Mathematics and Computation 249 (2014), 487--501] and [F. Foucaud and M. A. Henning. Locating-total dominating sets in twin-free graphs: a conjecture. The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics 23 (2016), P3.9] respectively, that any…
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