Burnability of double spiders and path forests

The burning number of a graph can be used to measure the spreading speed of contagion in a network. The burning number conjecture is arguably the main unresolved conjecture related to this graph parameter, which can be settled by showing that every tree of order m(2) has burning number at most m. Th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tan, Ta Sheng, Teh, Wen Chean
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2023
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/39422/
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Institution: Universiti Malaya
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Summary:The burning number of a graph can be used to measure the spreading speed of contagion in a network. The burning number conjecture is arguably the main unresolved conjecture related to this graph parameter, which can be settled by showing that every tree of order m(2) has burning number at most m. This is known to hold for many classes of trees, including spiders - trees with exactly one vertex of degree greater than two. In fact, it has been verified that certain spiders of order slightly larger than m(2) also have burning numbers at most m, a result that has then been conjectured to be true for all trees. The first focus of this paper is to verify this slightly stronger conjecture for double spiders - trees with two vertices of degrees at least three and they are adjacent. Our other focus concerns the burning numbers of path forests, a class of graphs in which their burning numbers are naturally related to that of spiders and double spiders. Here, our main result shows that a path forest of order m(2) with a sufficiently long shortest path has burning number exactly m, the smallest possible for any path forest of the same order. (C) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.