Abstract

Given a connected graph G, the metric (resp. edge metric) dimension of G is the cardinality of the smallest ordered set of vertices that uniquely identifies every pair of distinct vertices (resp. edges) of G by means of distance vectors to such a set. In this work, we settle three open problems on (edge) metric dimension of graphs. Specifically, we show that for every r,t≥2 with r≠t, there is n0, such that for every n≥n0 there exists a graph G of order n with metric dimension r and edge metric dimension t, which among other consequences, shows the existence of infinitely many graph whose edge metric dimension is strictly smaller than its metric dimension. In addition, we also prove that it is not possible to bound the edge metric dimension of a graph G by some constant factor of the metric dimension of G.

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