Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6871779 Discrete Applied Mathematics 2017 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
The robber locating game, introduced by Seager (2012), is a variation of the classic cops and robbers game on a graph. A cop attempts to locate an invisible robber on a graph by probing a single vertex v each turn, from which the cop learns the robber's distance. The robber is then permitted to stay at his current vertex or move to an adjacent vertex other than v. A graph is locatable if the cop is able to locate the robber in a finite number of probes, and the location number of a graph is the minimum number of probes necessary to determine the robber's location regardless of the robber's evasion strategy. We provide a strategy that locates the robber on trees. The number of probes used under this strategy meets, and often improves, the theoretical bound on the location number of trees.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics
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