Journal of Combinatorics

Volume 8 (2017)

Number 1

Random subgraphs make identification affordable

Pages: 57 – 77

DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4310/JOC.2017.v8.n1.a3

Authors

Florent Foucaud (LIMOS – CNRS UMR 6158, Université Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, France)

Guillem Perarnau (School of Mathematics, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom)

Oriol Serra (Departament de Matemàtiques, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain; and Barcelona Graduate School of Mathematics, Barcelona, Spain)

Abstract

An identifying code of a graph is a dominating set which uniquely determines all the vertices by their neighborhood within the code. Whereas graphs with large minimum degree have small domination number, this is not the case for the identifying code number (the size of a smallest identifying code), which indeed is not even a monotone parameter with respect to graph inclusion.

We show that for every large enough $\Delta$, every graph $G$ on $n$ vertices with maximum degree $\Delta$ and minimum degree $\delta \geq c \log \Delta$, for some constant $c \gt 0$, contains a large spanning subgraph which admits an identifying code with size $O (\frac{n \log \Delta}{\delta})$. In particular, if $\delta = \Theta (n)$, then $G$ has a dense spanning subgraph with identifying code $O (\log n)$, namely, of asymptotically optimal size. The subgraph we build is created using a probabilistic approach, and we use an interplay of various random methods to analyze it. Moreover we show that the result is essentially best possible, both in terms of the number of deleted edges and the size of the identifying code.

Keywords

identifying codes, random subgraphs

2010 Mathematics Subject Classification

05C69, 05C80, 05D40

Published 2 December 2016