Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6871431 Discrete Applied Mathematics 2018 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
The Wiener index W(G) of a connected graph G is defined to be the sum of distances between all pairs of vertices in G. In 1991, Å oltés studied changes of the Wiener index caused by removing a single vertex. He posed the problem of finding all graphs G so that equality W(G)=W(G−v) holds for all their vertices v. The cycle with 11 vertices is still the only known graph with this property. In this paper we study a relaxed version of this problem and find graphs which Wiener index does not change when a particular vertex v is removed. We show that there is a unicyclic graph G on n vertices with W(G)=W(G−v) if and only if n≥9. Also, there is a unicyclic graph G with a cycle of length c for which W(G)=W(G−v) if and only if c≥5. Moreover, we show that every graph G is an induced subgraph of H such that W(H)=W(H−v). As our relaxed version is rich with solutions, it gives hope that Å oltes's problem may have also some solutions distinct from C11.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics
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