Basic problems of kinetic processing of nonisothermal data ascertained from thermal analysis measurements can be solved by isoconversional methods Analysis of the dependence of the activation energy on conversion often permits the identification of the kinetic scheme for the process This dependence
A unified approach to known and unknown cases of Berge's conjecture
β Scribed by Eli Berger; Irith Ben-Arroyo Hartman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 185 KB
- Volume
- 71
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0364-9024
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Berge's elegant dipath partition conjecture from 1982 states that in a dipath partition P of the vertex set of a digraph minimizing , there exists a collection C^k^ of k disjoint independent sets, where each dipath PβP meets exactly min{|P|, k} of the independent sets in C. This conjecture extends Linial's conjecture, the GreeneβKleitman Theorem and Dilworth's Theorem for all digraphs. The conjecture is known to be true for acyclic digraphs. For general digraphs, it is known for k=1 by the GallaiβMilgram Theorem, for kβ©ΎΞ» (where Ξ»is the number of vertices in the longest dipath in the graph), by the GallaiβRoy Theorem, and when the optimal path partition P contains only dipaths P with |P|β©Ύk. Recently, it was proved (Eur J Combin (2007)) for k=2.
There was no proof that covers all the known cases of Berge's conjecture. In this article, we give an algorithmic proof of a stronger version of the conjecture for acyclic digraphs, using network flows, which covers all the known cases, except the case k=2, and the new, unknown case, of k=Ξ»β1 for all digraphs. So far, there has been no proof that unified all these cases. This proof gives hope for finding a proof for all k.
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