In graph theory, an edge-graceful labeling is a type of graph labeling for simple, connected graphs in which no two distinct edges connect the same two distinct vertices and no edge connects a vertex to itself.
Edge-graceful labelings were first introduced by Sheng-Ping Lo in his seminal paper.[1]
Definition
Given a graph G, we denote the set of edges by E(G) and the vertices by V(G). Let q be the cardinality of E(G) and p be that of V(G). Once a labeling of the edges is given, a vertex u of the graph is labeled by the sum of the labels of the edges incident to it, modulo p. Or, in symbols, the induced labeling on the vertex u is given by
where V(u) is the label for the vertex and E(e) is the assigned value of an edge incident to u.
The problem is to find a labeling for the edges such that all the labels from 1 to q are used once and the induced labels on the vertices run from 0 to p – 1. In other words, the resulting set for labels of the edges should be {1, 2, …, q} and {0, 1, …, p – 1} for the vertices.
A graph G is said to be edge-graceful if it admits an edge-graceful labeling.
Examples
Cycles
Consider the cycle with three vertices, C3. This is simply a triangle. One can label the edges 1, 2, and 3, and check directly that, along with the induced labeling on the vertices, this gives an edge-graceful labeling. Similar to paths, Cm is edge-graceful when m is odd and not when m is even.[2]
Paths
Consider a path with two vertices, P2. Here the only possibility is to label the only edge in the graph 1. The induced labeling on the two vertices are both 1. So P2 is not edge-graceful.
Appending an edge and a vertex to P2 gives P3, the path with three vertices. Denote the vertices by v1, v2, and v3. Label the two edges in the following way: the edge (v1, v2) is labeled 1 and (v2, v3) labeled 2. The induced labelings on v1, v2, and v3 are then 1, 0, and 2 respectively. This is an edge-graceful labeling and so P3 is edge-graceful.
Similarly, one can check that P4 is not edge-graceful.
In general, Pm is edge-graceful when m is odd and not edge-graceful when it is even. This follows from a necessary condition for edge-gracefulness.
A necessary condition
Lo gave a necessary condition for a graph with q edges and p vertices to be edge-graceful:[1]q(q + 1) must be congruent to p(p – 1)/2 mod p. In symbols:
This is referred to as Lo's condition in the literature.[3] This follows from the fact that the sum of the labels of the vertices is twice the sum of the edges, modulo p. This is useful for disproving a graph is edge-graceful. For instance, one can apply this directly to the path and cycle examples given above.
Further selected results
- The Petersen graph is not edge-graceful.
- The star graph (a central node and m legs of length 1) is edge-graceful when m is even and not when m is odd.[4]
- The friendship graph is edge-graceful when m is odd and not when it is even.
- Regular trees, (depth n with each non-leaf node emitting m new vertices) are edge-graceful when m is even for any value n but not edge-graceful whenever m is odd.[5]
- The complete graph on n vertices, , is edge-graceful unless n is singly even, .
- The ladder graph is never edge-graceful.
References
- 1 2 Lo, Sheng-Ping (1985). "On Edge-Graceful Labelings of Graphs". Congressus Numerantium. Sundance Conference, Utah. Vol. 50. pp. 231–241. Zbl 0597.05054.
- ↑ Q. Kuan, S. Lee, J. Mitchem, and A. Wang (1988). "On Edge-Graceful Unicyclic Graphs". Congressus Numerantium. 61: 65–74.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ L. Lee, S. Lee and G. Murty (1988). "On Edge-Graceful Labelings of Complete Graphs: Solutions of Lo's Conjecture". Congressus Numerantium. 62: 225–233.
- ↑ D. Small (1990). "Regular (even) Spider Graphs are Edge-Graceful". Congressus Numerantium. 74: 247–254.
- ↑ S. Cabaniss, R. Low, J. Mitchem (1992). "On Edge-Graceful Regular Graphs and Trees". Ars Combinatoria. 34: 129–142.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)