On some problems regarding distance-balanced graphs
Abstract
A graph is said to be distance-balanced if for any edge of , the number of vertices closer to than to is equal to the number of vertices closer to than to , and it is called nicely distance-balanced if in addition this number is independent of the chosen edge . A graph is said to be strongly distance-balanced if for any edge of and any integer , the number of vertices at distance from and at distance from is equal to the number of vertices at distance from and at distance from . In this paper we answer an open problem posed by Kutnar and Miklavi\v{c} [European J. Combin. 39 (2014), 57-67] by constructing several infinite families of nonbipartite nicely distance-balanced graphs which are not strongly distance-balanced. We disprove a conjecture regarding characterization of strongly distance-balanced graphs posed by Balakrishnan et al. [European J. Combin. 30 (2009), 1048-1053] by providing infinitely many counterexamples, and answer an open question posed by Kutnar et al. in [Discrete Math. 306 (2006), 1881-1894] regarding existence of semisymmetric distance-balanced graphs which are not strongly distance-balanced by providing an infinite family of such examples. We also show that for a graph with vertices and edges it can be checked in time if is strongly-distance balanced and if is nicely distance-balanced.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2201.02430,
title = {On some problems regarding distance-balanced graphs},
author = {Blas Fernandez and Ademir Hujdurovic},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2201.02430},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
16 pages