#8997 - An explicit construction of graphs of bounded degree that are far from being Hamiltonian

Isolde Adler ; Noleen Köhler - An explicit construction of graphs of bounded degree that are far from being Hamiltonian

dmtcs:7109 - Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science, January 31, 2022, vol. 24, no. 1 - https://doi.org/10.46298/dmtcs.7109
An explicit construction of graphs of bounded degree that are far from being HamiltonianArticle

Authors: Isolde Adler ; Noleen Köhler ORCID

    Hamiltonian cycles in graphs were first studied in the 1850s. Since then, an impressive amount of research has been dedicated to identifying classes of graphs that allow Hamiltonian cycles, and to related questions. The corresponding decision problem, that asks whether a given graph is Hamiltonian (i.\,e.\ admits a Hamiltonian cycle), is one of Karp's famous NP-complete problems. In this paper we study graphs of bounded degree that are \emph{far} from being Hamiltonian, where a graph $G$ on $n$ vertices is \emph{far} from being Hamiltonian, if modifying a constant fraction of $n$ edges is necessary to make $G$ Hamiltonian. We give an explicit deterministic construction of a class of graphs of bounded degree that are locally Hamiltonian, but (globally) far from being Hamiltonian. Here, \emph{locally Hamiltonian} means that every subgraph induced by the neighbourhood of a small vertex set appears in some Hamiltonian graph. More precisely, we obtain graphs which differ in $\Theta(n)$ edges from any Hamiltonian graph, but non-Hamiltonicity cannot be detected in the neighbourhood of $o(n)$ vertices. Our class of graphs yields a class of hard instances for one-sided error property testers with linear query complexity. It is known that any property tester (even with two-sided error) requires a linear number of queries to test Hamiltonicity (Yoshida, Ito, 2010). This is proved via a randomised construction of hard instances. In contrast, our construction is deterministic. So far only very few deterministic constructions of hard instances for property testing are known. We believe that our construction may lead to future insights in graph theory and towards a characterisation of the properties that are testable in the bounded-degree model.


    Volume: vol. 24, no. 1
    Section: Graph Theory
    Published on: January 31, 2022
    Accepted on: January 2, 2022
    Submitted on: January 20, 2021
    Keywords: Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics,Computer Science - Computational Complexity,Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms,G.2.2

    Classifications

    Mathematics Subject Classification 20201

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