Robust Connectivity of Graphs on Surfaces
Peter Bradshaw, Tom\'a\v{s} Masa\v{r}\'ik, Jana Novotn\'a, Ladislav Stacho

TL;DR
This paper explores the properties of robust connectivity in surface-embedded graphs, establishing bounds and connections to surface and planar graph properties, with implications for longstanding conjectures.
Contribution
It provides tight bounds for robust connectivity in surface-embedded graphs and links it to surface connectivity, addressing a classic conjecture in planar graphs.
Findings
Established a tight asymptotic bound of (^{-rac{1}{r}}) for r-connected graphs.
Connected robust connectivity with surface connectivity of the embedding surface.
Related robust connectivity to a longstanding conjecture on induced forests in planar graphs.
Abstract
Let denote the set of leaves in a tree . One natural problem is to look for a spanning tree of a given graph such that is as large as possible. This problem is called maximum leaf number, and it is a well-known NP-hard problem. Throughout recent decades, this problem has received considerable attention, ranging from pure graph theoretic questions to practical problems related to the construction of wireless networks. Recently, a similar but stronger notion was defined by Bradshaw, Masa\v{r}\'ik, and Stacho [Flexible List Colorings in Graphs with Special Degeneracy Conditions, ISAAC 2020]. They introduced a new invariant for a graph , called the robust connectivity and written , defined as the minimum value taken over all nonempty subsets , where is a spanning tree on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Graph Theory Research · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Interconnection Networks and Systems
