Fault tolerant metric dimension equals 4 for bicyclic graphs of type I and II and is given by a formula in inner and outer cycles for leafless cacti graphs, with an application to supply chain center placement.
Complexity of Metric Dimension on Planar Graphs
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The metric dimension of a graph $G$ is the size of a smallest subset $L \subseteq V(G)$ such that for any $x,y \in V(G)$ with $x\not= y$ there is a $z \in L$ such that the graph distance between $x$ and $z$ differs from the graph distance between $y$ and $z$. Even though this notion has been part of the literature for almost 40 years, prior to our work the computational complexity of determining the metric dimension of a graph was still very unclear. In this paper, we show tight complexity boundaries for the Metric Dimension problem. We achieve this by giving two complementary results. First, we show that the Metric Dimension problem on planar graphs of maximum degree $6$ is NP-complete. Then, we give a polynomial-time algorithm for determining the metric dimension of outerplanar graphs.
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Fault Tolerant Metric Dimensions of Leafless Cacti Graphs with Application in Supply Chain Management
Fault tolerant metric dimension equals 4 for bicyclic graphs of type I and II and is given by a formula in inner and outer cycles for leafless cacti graphs, with an application to supply chain center placement.