English

Burning Graph Classes

Combinatorics 2021-11-03 v1

Abstract

The Burning Number Conjecture, that a graph on nn vertices can be burned in at most n \lceil \sqrt{n} \ \rceil rounds, has been of central interest for the past several years. Much of the literature toward its resolution focuses on two directions: tightening a general upper bound for the burning number, and proving the conjecture for specific graph classes. In the latter, most of the developments work within a specific graph class and exploit the intricacies particular to it. In this article, we broaden this approach by developing systematic machinery that can be used as test beds for asserting that graph classes satisfy the conjecture. We show how to use these to resolve the conjecture for several classes of graphs including triangle-free graphs with degree lower bounds, graphs with certain linear lower bounds on rr-neighborhood sizes, all trees whose non-leaf vertices have degree at least 44, trees whose non-leaf vertices have degree at least 33 (on at least 8181 vertices), trees whose non-leaf vertices are less than 23\frac{2}{3} concentrated in degree 22, and trees with a low concentration of high degree non-leaf vertices (the last two results holding for sufficiently many non-leaf vertices).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2111.01328,
  title  = {Burning Graph Classes},
  author = {Mohamed Omar and Vibha Rohilla},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2111.01328},
  year   = {2021}
}

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13 pages