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arXiv:1110.4205 [math.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

A Tur'an-type problem for circular arc graphs

Rosalie Carlson, Stephen Flood, Kevin O'Neill, Francis Edward Su

Published 2011-10-19Version 1

A circular arc graph is the intersection graph of a collection of connected arcs on the circle. We solve a Tur'an-type problem for circular arc graphs: for n arcs, if m and M are the minimum and maximum number of arcs that contain a common point, what is the maximum number of edges the circular arc graph can contain? We establish a sharp bound and produce a maximal construction. For a fixed m, this can be used to show that if the circular arc graph has enough edges, there must be a point that is covered by at least M arcs. In the case m=0, we recover results for interval graphs established by Abbott and Katchalski (1979). We suggest applications to voting situations with interval or circular political spectra.

Comments: 18 pages, 8 figures, related papers at http://www.math.hmc.edu/~su/papers.html
Categories: math.CO, cs.DM
Subjects: 05C75, 91B12
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