Fleischner's theorem

Theorem on Hamiltonian graphs
A 2-vertex-connected graph, its square, and a Hamiltonian cycle in the square

In graph theory, a branch of mathematics, Fleischner's theorem gives a sufficient condition for a graph to contain a Hamiltonian cycle. It states that, if G {\displaystyle G} is a 2-vertex-connected graph, then the square of G {\displaystyle G} is Hamiltonian. It is named after Herbert Fleischner, who published its proof in 1974.

Definitions and statement

An undirected graph G {\displaystyle G} is Hamiltonian if it contains a cycle that touches each of its vertices exactly once. It is 2-vertex-connected if it does not have an articulation vertex, a vertex whose deletion would leave the remaining graph disconnected. Not every 2-vertex-connected graph is Hamiltonian; counterexamples include the Petersen graph and the complete bipartite graph K 2 , 3 {\displaystyle K_{2,3}} .

The square of G {\displaystyle G} is a graph G 2 {\displaystyle G^{2}} that has the same vertex set as G {\displaystyle G} , and in which two vertices are adjacent if and only if they have distance at most two in G {\displaystyle G} . Fleischner's theorem states that the square of a finite 2-vertex-connected graph with at least three vertices must always be Hamiltonian. Equivalently, the vertices of every 2-vertex-connected graph G {\displaystyle G} may be arranged into a cyclic order such that adjacent vertices in this order are at distance at most two from each other in G {\displaystyle G} .

Extensions

In Fleischner's theorem, it is possible to constrain the Hamiltonian cycle in G 2 {\displaystyle G^{2}} so that for given vertices v {\displaystyle v} and w {\displaystyle w} of G {\displaystyle G} it includes two edges of G {\displaystyle G} incident with v {\displaystyle v} and one edge of G {\displaystyle G} incident with w {\displaystyle w} . Moreover, if v {\displaystyle v} and w {\displaystyle w} are adjacent in G {\displaystyle G} , then these are three different edges of G {\displaystyle G} .[1]

In addition to having a Hamiltonian cycle, the square of a 2-vertex-connected graph G {\displaystyle G} must also be Hamiltonian connected (meaning that it has a Hamiltonian path starting and ending at any two designated vertices) and 1-Hamiltonian (meaning that if any vertex is deleted, the remaining graph still has a Hamiltonian cycle).[2] It must also be vertex pancyclic, meaning that for every vertex v {\displaystyle v} and every integer k {\displaystyle k} with 3 k | V ( G ) {\displaystyle 3\leq k\leq |V(G)} , there exists a cycle of length k {\displaystyle k} containing v {\displaystyle v} .[3]

If a graph G {\displaystyle G} is not 2-vertex-connected, then its square may or may not have a Hamiltonian cycle, and determining whether it does have one is NP-complete.[4]

An infinite graph cannot have a Hamiltonian cycle, because every cycle is finite, but Carsten Thomassen proved that if G {\displaystyle G} is an infinite locally finite 2-vertex-connected graph with a single end then G 2 {\displaystyle G^{2}} necessarily has a doubly infinite Hamiltonian path.[5] More generally, if G {\displaystyle G} is locally finite, 2-vertex-connected, and has any number of ends, then G 2 {\displaystyle G^{2}} has a Hamiltonian circle. In a compact topological space formed by viewing the graph as a simplicial complex and adding an extra point at infinity to each of its ends, a Hamiltonian circle is defined to be a subspace that is homeomorphic to a Euclidean circle and covers every vertex.[6]

Algorithms

The Hamiltonian cycle in the square of an n {\displaystyle n} -vertex 2-connected graph can be found in linear time,[7] improving over the first algorithmic solution by Lau[8] of running time O ( n 2 ) {\displaystyle O(n^{2})} . Fleischner's theorem can be used to provide a 2-approximation to the bottleneck traveling salesman problem in metric spaces.[9]

History

A proof of Fleischner's theorem was announced by Herbert Fleischner in 1971 and published by him in 1974, solving a 1966 conjecture of Crispin Nash-Williams also made independently by L. W. Beineke and Michael D. Plummer.[10] In his review of Fleischner's paper, Nash-Williams wrote that it had solved "a well known problem which has for several years defeated the ingenuity of other graph-theorists".[11]

Fleischner's original proof was complicated. Václav Chvátal, in the work in which he invented graph toughness, observed that the square of a k {\displaystyle k} -vertex-connected graph is necessarily k {\displaystyle k} -tough; he conjectured that 2-tough graphs are Hamiltonian, from which another proof of Fleischner's theorem would have followed.[12] Counterexamples to this conjecture were later discovered,[13] but the possibility that a finite bound on toughness might imply Hamiltonicity remains an important open problem in graph theory. A simpler proof both of Fleischner's theorem, and of its extensions by Chartrand et al. (1974), was given by Říha (1991),[14] and another simplified proof of the theorem was given by Georgakopoulos (2009a).[15]

References

Notes

Primary sources

  • Alstrup, Stephen; Georgakopoulos, Agelos; Rotenberg, Eva; Thomassen, Carsten (2018), "A Hamiltonian Cycle in the Square of a 2-connected Graph in Linear Time", Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, pp. 1645–1649, doi:10.1137/1.9781611975031.107, ISBN 978-1-61197-503-1
  • Bauer, D.; Broersma, H. J.; Veldman, H. J. (2000), "Not every 2-tough graph is Hamiltonian", Proceedings of the 5th Twente Workshop on Graphs and Combinatorial Optimization (Enschede, 1997), Discrete Applied Mathematics, 99 (1–3): 317–321, doi:10.1016/S0166-218X(99)00141-9, MR 1743840.
  • Bondy, J. A. (1971), "Pancyclic graphs", Proceedings of the Second Louisiana Conference on Combinatorics, Graph Theory and Computing (Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge, La., 1971), Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University, pp. 167–172, MR 0325458.
  • Chartrand, G.; Hobbs, Arthur M.; Jung, H. A.; Kapoor, S. F.; Nash-Williams, C. St. J. A. (1974), "The square of a block is Hamiltonian connected", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 16 (3): 290–292, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(74)90075-6, MR 0345865.
  • Chvátal, Václav (1973), "Tough graphs and Hamiltonian circuits", Discrete Mathematics, 5 (3): 215–228, doi:10.1016/0012-365X(73)90138-6, MR 0316301.
  • Fleischner, Herbert (1974), "The square of every two-connected graph is Hamiltonian", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 16: 29–34, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(74)90091-4, MR 0332573.
  • Fleischner, H. (1976), "In the square of graphs, Hamiltonicity and pancyclicity, Hamiltonian connectedness and panconnectedness are equivalent concepts", Monatshefte für Mathematik, 82 (2): 125–149, doi:10.1007/BF01305995, MR 0427135.
  • Georgakopoulos, Agelos (2009a), "A short proof of Fleischner's theorem", Discrete Mathematics, 309 (23–24): 6632–6634, doi:10.1016/j.disc.2009.06.024, MR 2558627.
  • Georgakopoulos, Agelos (2009b), "Infinite Hamilton cycles in squares of locally finite graphs", Advances in Mathematics, 220 (3): 670–705, doi:10.1016/j.aim.2008.09.014, MR 2483226.
  • Hobbs, Arthur M. (1976), "The square of a block is vertex pancyclic", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 20 (1): 1–4, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(76)90061-7, MR 0416980.
  • Hochbaum, Dorit S.; Shmoys, David B. (1986), "A unified approach to approximation algorithms for bottleneck problems", Journal of the ACM, 33 (3), New York, NY, USA: ACM: 533–550, doi:10.1145/5925.5933.
  • Lau, H. T. (1980), Finding a Hamiltonian cycle in the square of a block., Ph.D. thesis, Montreal: McGill University. As cited by Hochbaum & Shmoys (1986).
  • Müttel, Janina; Rautenbach, Dieter (2012), "A short proof of the versatile version of Fleischner's theorem", Discrete Mathematics, 313 (19): 1929–1933, doi:10.1016/j.disc.2012.07.032.
  • Parker, R. Garey; Rardin, Ronald L. (1984), "Guaranteed performance heuristics for the bottleneck traveling salesman problem", Operations Research Letters, 2 (6): 269–272, doi:10.1016/0167-6377(84)90077-4.
  • Říha, Stanislav (1991), "A new proof of the theorem by Fleischner", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 52 (1): 117–123, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(91)90098-5, MR 1109427.
  • Thomassen, Carsten (1978), "Hamiltonian paths in squares of infinite locally finite blocks", in Bollobás, B. (ed.), Advances in Graph Theory (Cambridge Combinatorial Conf., Trinity College, Cambridge, 1977), Annals of Discrete Mathematics, vol. 3, Elsevier, pp. 269–277, doi:10.1016/S0167-5060(08)70512-0, ISBN 978-0-7204-0843-0, MR 0499125.
  • Underground, Polly (1978), "On graphs with Hamiltonian squares", Discrete Mathematics, 21 (3): 323, doi:10.1016/0012-365X(78)90164-4, MR 0522906.

Secondary sources

  • Bondy, J. A. (1995), "Basic graph theory: paths and circuits", Handbook of combinatorics, Vol. 1, 2, Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 3–110, MR 1373656.
  • Chartrand, Gary; Lesniak, Linda; Zhang, Ping (2010), Graphs & Digraphs (5th ed.), CRC Press, p. 139, ISBN 9781439826270.
  • Diestel, Reinhard (2012), "10. Hamiltonian cycles", Graph Theory (PDF) (corrected 4th electronic ed.)