The forcing number of graphs with a given girth
Randy Davila, Michael Henning

TL;DR
This paper proves a conjecture relating the forcing number of a graph to its girth and minimum degree for girth values 7 to 10, extending previous results to all minimum degrees.
Contribution
It establishes the conjecture that the forcing number is bounded below by a function of girth and minimum degree for girth 7 to 10, for all minimum degrees.
Findings
Proves the conjecture for girth 7,8,9,10 and all minimum degrees.
Extends previous partial results to a complete proof for specified girth values.
Confirms the lower bound on the forcing number in these cases.
Abstract
In this paper, we study a dynamic coloring of the vertices of a graph that starts with an initial subset of colored vertices, with all remaining vertices being non-colored. At each discrete time interval, a colored vertex with exactly one non-colored neighbor forces this non-colored neighbor to be colored. The initial set is called a forcing set of if, by iteratively applying the forcing process, every vertex in becomes colored. The forcing number, originally known as the \emph{zero forcing number}, and denoted , of is the cardinality of a smallest forcing set of . We study lower bounds on the forcing number in terms of its minimum degree and girth, where the girth of a graph is the length of a shortest cycle in the graph. Let be a graph with minimum degree and girth~. Davila and Kenter [Theory and Applications of Graphs,…
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