English

Probabilistic Zero Forcing in Graphs

Combinatorics 2012-08-20 v3

Abstract

The \emph{zero forcing number} Z(G)Z(G) of a graph GG is the minimum cardinality of a set SS of black vertices (whereas vertices in V(G)\setminusSV(G)\setminusS are colored white) such that V(G)V(G) is turned black after finitely many applications of "the (classical) color change rule": a white vertex is converted to a black vertex if it is the only white neighbor of a black vertex. Zero forcing number was introduced and used to bound the minimum rank of graphs by the "AIM Minimum Rank - Special Graphs Work Group". We introduce here a probabilistic color change rule (pccr) which is a natural generalization of the classical color change rule. We introduce a theory of probabilistic zero forcing arising out of the pccr; the theory yields a quantity PA(G)P_A(G), which can be viewed as the probability that a graph GG with an initial black set AA will be converted entirely to the color black. We also interpret the evolution of the sample spaces of this theory as a Markov process. We end with a few basic examples illustrating this theory.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1204.6237,
  title  = {Probabilistic Zero Forcing in Graphs},
  author = {Cong X. Kang and Eunjeong Yi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1204.6237},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

6 pages, 2 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T20:55:45.975Z