Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4647238 | Discrete Mathematics | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Given a graph G and a function h from E(G) to N, the h-subdivision of G, denoted by G(h), is the graph obtained from G by replacing each edge uv in G with a path P:uxuv1xuv2â¦xuvnâ1v, where n=h(uv). When h(e)=c is a constant for all eâE(G), we use G(c) to replace G(h). Given a graph G, an L(2,1)-labeling of G is a function f from the vertex set V(G) to the set of all nonnegative integers such that |f(x)âf(y)|â¥2 if dG(x,y)=1, and |f(x)âf(y)|â¥1 if dG(x,y)=2. A k-L(2,1)-labeling is an L(2,1)-labeling such that no label is greater than k. The L(2,1)-labeling number of G, denoted by λ(G), is the smallest number k such that G has a k-L(2,1)-labeling. We study the L(2,1)-labeling numbers of subdivisions of graphs in this paper. We prove that λ(G(3))=Î(G)+1 for any graph G with Î(G)â¥4, and show that λ(G(h))=Î(G)+1 if Î(G)â¥5 and h is a function from E(G) to N so that h(e)â¥3 for all eâE(G), or if Î(G)â¥4 and h is a function from E(G) to N so that h(e)â¥4 for all eâE(G).
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics
Authors
Fei-Huang Chang, Ma-Lian Chia, David Kuo, Sheng-Chyang Liaw, Meng-Hsuan Tsai,