Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4652318 Electronic Notes in Discrete Mathematics 2009 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Much of extremal graph theory has concentrated either on finding very small subgraphs of a large graph (such as Turán's theorem [Turán, P., On an extremal problem in graph theory (in Hungarian), Matematiko Fizicki Lapok 48 (1941), 436–452]) or on finding spanning subgraphs (such as Dirac's theorem [Dirac, G.A., Some theorems on abstract graphs, Proc. London Math. Soc. s3-2 (1952), 69–81] or more recently work of Komlós, Sárközy and Szemerédi [Komlós, J., G. N. Sárközy and E. Szemerédi, On the square of a Hamiltonian cycle in dense graphs, Random Struct. Algorithms 9 (1996), 193-211; Komlós, J., G. N. Sárközy and E. Szemerédi, Proof of the Seymour Conjecture for large graphs, Ann. Comb. 2 (1998), 43–60] towards a proof of the Pósa-Seymour conjecture). Only a few results give conditions to obtain some intermediate-sized subgraph. We contend that this neglect is unjustified. To support our contention we focus on the illustrative case of minimum degree conditions which guarantee squared-cycles of various lengths, but also offer results, conjectures and comments on other powers of paths and cycles, generalisations thereof, and hypergraph variants.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics