English

Dominating Sets in Triangulations on Surfaces

Combinatorics 2011-03-31 v4

Abstract

A dominating set D of a graph G is a set such that each vertex v of G is either in the set or adjacent to a vertex in the set. Matheson and Tarjan (1996) proved that any n-vertex plane triangulation has a dominating set of size at most n/3, and conjectured a bound of n/4 for n sufficiently large. King and Pelsmajer recently proved this for graphs with maximum degree at most 6. Plummer and Zha (2009) and Honjo, Kawarabayashi, and Nakamoto (2009) extended the n/3 bound to triangulations on surfaces. We prove two related results: (i) There is a constant c such that any n-vertex plane triangulation with maximum degree at most 6 has a dominating set of size at most n/6 + c. (ii) For any surface S, nonnegative t, and epsilon > 0, there exists C such that for any n-vertex triangulation on S with at most t vertices of degree other than 6, there is a dominating set of size at most n(1/6 + epsilon) + C. As part of the proof, we also show that any n-vertex triangulation of a non-orientable surface has a non-contractible cycle of length at most 2sqrt(n). Albertson and Hutchinson (1986) proved that for n-vertex triangulation of an orientable surface other than a sphere has a non-contractible cycle of length sqrt(2n), but no similar result was known for non-orientable surfaces.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1006.1879,
  title  = {Dominating Sets in Triangulations on Surfaces},
  author = {Hong Liu and Michael J. Pelsmajer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1006.1879},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

26 pages, 12 figures; small fix

R2 v1 2026-06-21T15:34:07.430Z