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Boxicity of Circular Arc Graphs
- Publication Year :
- 2008
-
Abstract
- A $k$-dimensional box is the cartesian product $R_1 \times R_2 \times ... \times R_k$ where each $R_i$ is a closed interval on the real line. The {\it boxicity} of a graph $G$, denoted as $box(G)$, is the minimum integer $k$ such that $G$ can be represented as the intersection graph of a collection of $k$-dimensional boxes: that is two vertices are adjacent if and only if their corresponding boxes intersect. A circular arc graph is a graph that can be represented as the intersection graph of arcs on a circle. Let $G$ be a circular arc graph with maximum degree $\Delta$. We show that if $\Delta <\lfloor \frac{n(\alpha-1)}{2\alpha}\rfloor$, $\alpha \in \mathbb{N}$, $\alpha \geq 2$ then $box(G) \leq \alpha$. We also demonstrate a graph with boxicity $> \alpha$ but with $\Delta=n\frac{(\alpha-1)}{2\alpha}+\frac{n}{2\alpha(\alpha+1)}+(\alpha+2)$. So the result cannot be improved substantially when $\alpha$ is large. Let $r_{inf}$ be minimum number of arcs passing through any point on the circle with respect to some circular arc representation of $G$. We also show that for any circular arc graph $G$, $box(G) \leq r_{inf} + 1$ and this bound is tight. Given a family of arcs $F$ on the circle, the circular cover number $L(F)$ is the cardinality of the smallest subset $F'$ of $F$ such that the arcs in $F'$ can cover the circle. Maximum circular cover number $L_{max}(G)$ is defined as the maximum value of $L(F)$ obtained over all possible family of arcs $F$ that can represent $G$. We will show that if $G$ is a circular arc graph with $L_{max}(G)> 4$ then $box(G) \leq 3$.<br />Comment: 18 pages
- Subjects :
- Mathematics - Combinatorics
05C62
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.0810.5524
- Document Type :
- Working Paper