Quasi-kernels in split graphs
Abstract
In a digraph, a quasi-kernel is a subset of vertices that is independent and such that the shortest path from every vertex to this subset is of length at most two. The ``small quasi-kernel conjecture,'' proposed by Erd\H{o}s and Sz\'ekely in 1976, postulates that every sink-free digraph has a quasi-kernel whose size is within a fraction of the total number of vertices. The conjecture is even more precise with a ratio, but even with larger ratio, this property is known to hold only for few classes of graphs. The focus here is on small quasi-kernels in split graphs. This family of graphs has played a special role in the study of the conjecture since it was used to disprove a strengthening that postulated the existence of two disjoint quasi-kernels. The paper proves that every sink-free split digraph has a quasi-kernel of size at most , and even of size at most two when the graph is an orientation of a complete split graph. It is also shown that computing a quasi-kernel of minimal size in a split digraph is W[2]-hard.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2312.15519,
title = {Quasi-kernels in split graphs},
author = {Hélène Langlois and Frédéric Meunier and Romeo Rizzi and Stéphane Vialette and Yacong Zhou},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2312.15519},
year = {2024}
}