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Shortness exponent

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In graph theory, the shortness exponent is a numerical parameter of a family of graphs that measures how far from Hamiltonian the graphs in the family can be. Intuitively, if is the shortness exponent of a graph family , then every -vertex graph in the family has a cycle of length near but some graphs do not have longer cycles. More precisely, for any ordering of the graphs in into a sequence , with defined to be the length of the longest cycle in graph , the shortness exponent is defined as[1]

This number is always in the interval from 0 to 1; it is 1 for families of graphs that always contain a Hamiltonian or near-Hamiltonian cycle, and 0 for families of graphs in which the longest cycle length can be smaller than any constant power of the number of vertices.

The shortness exponent of the polyhedral graphs is . A construction based on kleetopes shows that some polyhedral graphs have longest cycle length ,[2] while it has also been proven that every polyhedral graph contains a cycle of length .[3] The polyhedral graphs are the graphs that are simultaneously planar and 3-vertex-connected; the assumption of 3-vertex-connectivity is necessary for these results, as there exist sets of 2-vertex-connected planar graphs (such as the complete bipartite graphs ) with shortness exponent 0. There are many additional known results on shortness exponents of restricted subclasses of planar and polyhedral graphs.[1]

The 3-vertex-connected cubic graphs (without the restriction that they be planar) also have a shortness exponent that has been proven to lie strictly between 0 and 1.[4][5]

References

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  1. ^ a b Grünbaum, Branko; Walther, Hansjoachim (1973), "Shortness exponents of families of graphs", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, 14: 364–385, doi:10.1016/0097-3165(73)90012-5, hdl:10338.dmlcz/101257, MR 0314691.
  2. ^ Moon, J. W.; Moser, L. (1963), "Simple paths on polyhedra", Pacific Journal of Mathematics, 13: 629–631, doi:10.2140/pjm.1963.13.629, MR 0154276.
  3. ^ Chen, Guantao; Yu, Xingxing (2002), "Long cycles in 3-connected graphs", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 86 (1): 80–99, doi:10.1006/jctb.2002.2113, MR 1930124.
  4. ^ Bondy, J. A.; Simonovits, M. (1980), "Longest cycles in 3-connected 3-regular graphs", Canadian Journal of Mathematics, 32 (4): 987–992, doi:10.4153/CJM-1980-076-2, MR 0590661.
  5. ^ Jackson, Bill (1986), "Longest cycles in 3-connected cubic graphs", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 41 (1): 17–26, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(86)90024-9, MR 0854600.