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Narsingh Deo (January 2, 1936 – January 13, 2023) was an Indian-American computer scientist. He served as a professor and the Charles N. Millican Endowed Chair of the Department of Computer Science, University of Central Florida .
Deo, Narsingh (1974). Graph Theory with Applications to Engineering and Computer Science (PDF). Englewood, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-363473-6. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2019-05-17. Gibbons, Alan (1985). Algorithmic Graph Theory. Cambridge University Press. Golumbic, Martin (1980). Algorithmic Graph Theory and Perfect Graphs.
Shortest path (A, C, E, D, F), blue, between vertices A and F in the weighted directed graph. In graph theory, the shortest path problem is the problem of finding a path between two vertices (or nodes) in a graph such that the sum of the weights of its constituent edges is minimized.
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Its authors have divided Elementary Number Theory, Group Theory and Ramanujan Graphs into four chapters. The first of these provides background in graph theory, including material on the girth of graphs (the length of the shortest cycle), on graph coloring, and on the use of the probabilistic method to prove the existence of graphs for which both the girth and the number of colors needed are ...
The "pearls" of the title include theorems, proofs, problems, and examples in graph theory.The book has ten chapters; after an introductory chapter on basic definitions, the remaining chapters material on graph coloring; Hamiltonian cycles and Euler tours; extremal graph theory; subgraph counting problems including connections to permutations, derangements, and Cayley's formula; graph ...
Given a graph , its Gallai–Edmonds decomposition consists of three disjoint sets of vertices, (), (), and (), whose union is (): the set of all vertices of .First, the vertices of are divided into essential vertices (vertices which are covered by every maximum matching in ) and inessential vertices (vertices which are left uncovered by at least one maximum matching in ).
A graph with three components. In graph theory, a component of an undirected graph is a connected subgraph that is not part of any larger connected subgraph. The components of any graph partition its vertices into disjoint sets, and are the induced subgraphs of those sets. A graph that is itself connected has exactly one component, consisting ...