Abstract

AbstractA signed graph, denoted by , is a graph G associated with a mapping . A cycle of is a connected 2‐regular subgraph. A cycle C is positive if it has an even number of negative edges, and negative otherwise. A signed‐circuit of a signed graph is a positive cycle or a barbell consisting of two edge‐disjoint negative cycles joined by a path. The definition of a signed‐circuit of signed graph comes from the signed‐graphic matroid. A signed‐circuit cover of is a family of signed‐circuits covering all edges of . A signed‐circuit cover with the smallest total length is called a shortest signed‐circuit cover of and its length is denoted by . Bouchet proved that a signed graph has a signed‐circuit cover if and only if it is flow‐admissible (i.e., has a nowhere‐zero integer flow). In this article, we show that a 3‐connected flow‐admissible signed graph does not necessarily have a signed‐circuit double cover. For shortest signed‐circuit cover of 2‐edge‐connected cubic signed graphs , we show that if it is flow‐admissible.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call