Applied Theory of Coding and Graphs
Schemes for constructing minimal vertex $1$-extensions of complete bicolored graphs
P. V. Razumovskii,
M. B. Abrosimov Saratov State University
Abstract:
Bicolored graphs are considered, i.e., graphs whose vertices are colored in two colors. Let
$G = (V, \alpha, f)$ be a colored graph with a coloring function
$f$ defined on the set of its vertices. A colored graph
$G^*$ is called a vertex
$1$-extension of a colored graph
$G$ if the graph
$G$ can be embedded preserving the colors into each graph obtained from the graph
$G^*$ by removing any of its vertices together with incident edges. A vertex
$1$-extension
$G^*$ of a graph
$G$ is called minimal if the graph
$G^*$ has two more vertices than the graph
$G$, and among all vertex
$1$-extensions of the graph
$G$ with the same number of vertices the graph
$G^*$ has the minimum number of edges. In this paper, we propose a full description of minimal vertex
$1$-extensions of complete bicolored graphs. Let
$K_{n_1, n_2}$ be a complete
$n$-vertex graph with
$n_1$ vertices of one color and
$n_2$ vertices of a different color. If in a complete bicolored graph
$n_1 = n_2 = 1$, then in the minimal vertex
$1$-extension of such a graph there is one additional edge. If in a complete bicolored graph either
$n_1 = 1$ or
$n_2 = 1$, then the minimal vertex
$1$-extension of such a graph has
$2n - 1$ additional edges. In all other cases, the minimal vertex
$1$-extension of a complete bicolored graph has
$2n$ additional edges. The schemes for constructing the corresponding minimal vertex
$1$-extensions are proposed.
Keywords:
colored graph, complete graph, graph extension, minimal vertex graph extension, fault tolerance.
UDC:
519.17
DOI:
10.17223/2226308X/14/38