English

Identifying codes in line graphs

Combinatorics 2014-03-19 v2 Discrete Mathematics

Abstract

An identifying code of a graph is a subset of its vertices such that every vertex of the graph is uniquely identified by the set of its neighbours within the code. We study the edge-identifying code problem, i.e. the identifying code problem in line graphs. If \ID(G)\ID(G) denotes the size of a minimum identifying code of an identifiable graph GG, we show that the usual bound \ID(G)log2(n+1)\ID(G)\ge \lceil\log_2(n+1)\rceil, where nn denotes the order of GG, can be improved to Θ(n)\Theta(\sqrt{n}) in the class of line graphs. Moreover, this bound is tight. We also prove that the upper bound \ID(L(G))2V(G)5\ID(\mathcal{L}(G))\leq 2|V(G)|-5, where L(G)\mathcal{L}(G) is the line graph of GG, holds (with two exceptions). This implies that a conjecture of R. Klasing, A. Kosowski, A. Raspaud and the first author holds for a subclass of line graphs. Finally, we show that the edge-identifying code problem is NP-complete, even for the class of planar bipartite graphs of maximum degree~3 and arbitrarily large girth.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1107.0207,
  title  = {Identifying codes in line graphs},
  author = {Florent Foucaud and Sylvain Gravier and Reza Naserasr and Aline Parreau and Petru Valicov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1107.0207},
  year   = {2014}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T18:30:34.550Z