The Path-Extremal Conjecture for Zero Forcing: Distance-Hereditary Graphs and a Split-Decomposition Reduction
Samuel German

TL;DR
This paper proves the path-extremal conjecture for zero forcing in distance-hereditary graphs and extends the result to certain split-decomposition classes, using structural graph decomposition techniques.
Contribution
It extends the path-extremal conjecture proof from trees to distance-hereditary graphs and introduces a split-decomposition approach for broader classes.
Findings
Proved the conjecture for distance-hereditary graphs.
Extended the proof to graphs with specific split-decomposition properties.
Identified a finite verification approach for prime cores in split-decomposition.
Abstract
For an -vertex graph , let denote the number of zero forcing sets of size . A conjecture of Boyer et al. asserts that the path maximizes these numbers coefficientwise among all -vertex graphs; equivalently, the zero forcing polynomial of every -vertex graph should be coefficientwise dominated by that of . We prove this path-extremal conjecture for distance-hereditary graphs. This extends the previously known tree case to a much larger class that includes, in particular, all trees and all cographs. We then use canonical split decomposition to push the argument one step beyond the distance-hereditary setting. Specifically, we show that if a split-prime graph and all of its induced subgraphs are path-extremal, then every connected graph whose canonical split decomposition has a unique prime bag whose label graph is isomorphic to is also…
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