Capítulo de livro Revisado por pares

Isoperimetric Problem and Meta-fibonacci Sequences

2008; Springer Science+Business Media; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/978-3-540-69733-6_3

ISSN

1611-3349

Autores

B.V. Subramanya Bharadwaj, L. Sunil Chandran, Anita Das,

Tópico(s)

Advanced Mathematical Theories and Applications

Resumo

Let G = (V,E) be a simple, finite, undirected graph. For S ⊆ V, let \(\delta(S,G) = \{ (u,v) \in E : u \in S \mbox { and } v \in V-S \}\) and \(\phi(S,G) = \{ v \in V -S: \exists u \in S\), such that (u,v) ∈ E} be the edge and vertex boundary of S, respectively. Given an integer i, 1 ≤ i ≤ ∣ V ∣, the edge and vertex isoperimetric value at i is defined as b e (i,G) = min S ⊆ V; |S| = i |δ(S,G)| and b v (i,G) = min S ⊆ V; |S| = i |φ(S,G)|, respectively. The edge (vertex) isoperimetric problem is to determine the value of b e (i, G) (b v (i, G)) for each i, 1 ≤ i ≤ |V|. If we have the further restriction that the set S should induce a connected subgraph of G, then the corresponding variation of the isoperimetric problem is known as the connected isoperimetric problem. The connected edge (vertex) isoperimetric values are defined in a corresponding way. It turns out that the connected edge isoperimetric and the connected vertex isoperimetric values are equal at each i, 1 ≤ i ≤ |V|, if G is a tree. Therefore we use the notation b c (i, T) to denote the connected edge (vertex) isoperimetric value of T at i.Hofstadter had introduced the interesting concept of meta-fibonacci sequences in his famous book "Gödel, Escher, Bach. An Eternal Golden Braid". The sequence he introduced is known as the Hofstadter sequences and most of the problems he raised regarding this sequence is still open. Since then mathematicians studied many other closely related meta-fibonacci sequences such as Tanny sequences, Conway sequences, Conolly sequences etc. Let T 2 be an infinite complete binary tree. In this paper we related the connected isoperimetric problem on T 2 with the Tanny sequences which is defined by the recurrence relation a(i) = a(i − 1 − a(i − 1)) + a(i − 2 − a(i − 2)), a(0) = a(1) = a(2) = 1. In particular, we show that b c (i, T 2) = i + 2 − 2a(i), for each i ≥ 1.We also propose efficient polynomial time algorithms to find vertex isoperimetric values at i of bounded pathwidth and bounded treewidth graphs.

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