Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science (Feb 2016)

The complexity of deciding whether a graph admits an orientation with fixed weak diameter

  • Julien Bensmail,
  • Romaric Duvignau,
  • Sergey Kirgizov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.46298/dmtcs.2161
Journal volume & issue
Vol. Vol. 17 no. 3, no. Graph Theory

Abstract

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An oriented graph $\overrightarrow{G}$ is said weak (resp. strong) if, for every pair $\{ u,v \}$ of vertices of $\overrightarrow{G}$, there are directed paths joining $u$ and $v$ in either direction (resp. both directions). In case, for every pair of vertices, some of these directed paths have length at most $k$, we call $\overrightarrow{G}$ $k$-weak (resp. $k$-strong). We consider several problems asking whether an undirected graph $G$ admits orientations satisfying some connectivity and distance properties. As a main result, we show that deciding whether $G$ admits a $k$-weak orientation is NP-complete for every $k \geq 2$. This notably implies the NP-completeness of several problems asking whether $G$ is an extremal graph (in terms of needed colours) for some vertex-colouring problems.

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