Monday, September 17 |
07:30 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Restaurant at your assigned hotel) |
09:15 - 09:30 |
Introduction and Welcome (Conference Room San Felipe) |
09:30 - 10:30 |
Thomas Tucker: Symmetry Breaking ↓ Given a group A acting on a set X, the distinguishing number, or asymmetric coloring number, denoted D(A,X) or ACN(A,X), is the smallest k such that X has a k-coloring where the only elements of A preserving the coloring fix all elements of X, thus "breaking" the symmetry of X under A. Albertson and Collins [1996] introduced and named D(G) in the context of a graph G with A=Aut(G),X=V(G), but precedents include Babai's work [1977] on regular trees, Cameron et al.\ [1984] and Seress [1997] on regular orbits for a primitive permutation group acting on the set of subsets of X, and work of many authors on the graph isomorphism problem using colors to "individualize" vertices. This talk will survey various aspects of symmetry breaking: contexts other than graphs (such as maps), bounds relating D(G) and the maximal degree of G, variations of D(G) where the coloring is proper or where edges are colored instead of vertices.
An underlying theme is the role of the elementary "Motion Lemma'' (Cameron et al. [1984] and Russel and Sundaram [1997]) that D≤2 when m(A)>2log2(|A|), where m(A) is the minimum number of elements of X moved by any element of A not acting as the identity on X. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:00 - 11:50 |
Florian Lehner: Distinguishing numbers of infinite graphs with bounded degrees ↓ A graph is said to have infinite motion, if every automorphism moves infinitely many vertices. Tucker's Infinite Motion Conjecture asserts that if a locally finite graph has infinite motion, then there is a 2-colouring of its vertex set which is only preserved by the identity automorphism. We show that this is true for graphs whose maximum degree is at most 5. In case the maximum degree is 3, we can even drop the assumption of infinite motion.
Coauthors: M. Pilsniak, M. Stawiski (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:00 - 12:50 |
Gabriel Verret: Distinguishing number of vertex-transitive graphs of valency 4 ↓ Apart from finitely many exceptions, connected vertex-transitive graphs of valency at most 3 have distinguishing number 2. Recently, Florian Lehner and I determined the distinguishing number of all vertex-transitive graphs of valency 4. In this case, there are infinitely many examples with distinguishing number 3. I will discuss this recent work, as well as some intriguing related questions. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:50 - 13:00 |
Group Photo (Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
13:00 - 14:30 |
Lunch (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
14:30 - 15:10 |
Rafal Kalinowski: Bounds for the distinguishing index of finite graphs ↓ The distinguishing index D′(G) of a graph G is the least number of colours in an edge colouring that breaks all nontrivial automorphisms of G. This invariant is defined only for graphs with at most one isolated vertex and without K2 as a component (we call them admissible graphs).
The general upper bound for connected admissible graphs is D′(G)≤Δ(G) except for small cycles C3,C4,C5. Moreover, it was proved by the second author that the equality holds only for cycles of length at least six, symmetric and bisymmetric trees and for two small graphs K4,K3,3. Recently, we proved with Imrich and Woźniak that D′(G)≤⌈√Δ(G)⌉+1 for every connected graph of order at least seven and without pendant edges.
There are classes of graphs with the distinguishing index at most two (perhaps with few known exceptions). For instance, traceable graphs, claw-free graphs, Cartesian powers of connected graphs, and 3-connected planar graphs (the latter result was recently proved by Pilśniak and Tucker).
A number of open problems will be formulated.
Coauthor: Monika Pilśniak (Conference Room San Felipe) |
15:15 - 15:55 |
Mariusz Wozniak: Distinguishing vertices of a graph: automorphisms and palettes ↓ If we want to distinguish all vertices of the graph by coloring its elements, then we have the following possibilities. We can use the concept of coloring that breaks non-trivial
automorphisms, or coloring that induces different color palettes for each vertex.
These approaches are not independent. Always distinguishing using automorphisms is stronger than using palettes. And, very often, the corresponding parameters are quite distant from each other.
We will show several situations when the corresponding parameters are close to each other.
The talk is based on the papers [1] and [2].
[1] R. Kalinowski, M. Pilśniak, J. Przybyło and M. Woźniak, How to personalize the vertices of a graph?, European Journal of Combinatorics 40 (2014), 116-123.
[2] R. Kalinowski, M. Pilśniak, M. Woźniak, Distinguishing graphs by total colourings, Ars Mathematica Contemporanea 11 (2016), 79-89. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:00 - 16:30 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:30 - 17:00 |
Mohammad Hadi Shekarriz: The number of different distinguishing colorings of a graph ↓ A vertex coloring of a graph G is called distinguishing if no non-identity automorphism of G preserves it. The distinguishing number of G, denoted by D(G), is the smallest number of colors required for such a coloring. We are intent to count number of different distinguishing colorings with a set of k colors for some certain kinds of graphs. To do this, we first introduce a parameter, namely Φk(G), as the number of different distinguishing colorings of a graph G with at most k definite colors. We then introduce another similar parameter, namely φk(G), as the number of different distinguishing colorings of a graph G with exactly k definite colors. Showing that it might be hard to calculate Φk(G) and φk(G) even for small graphs, we use the \emph{distinguishing threshold of G}, θ(G), which is the minimum number t such that for any k≥t, any arbitrary coloring of G with k colors is distinguishing. When k≥θ(G), calculating Φk(G) and φk(G) showed to be much easier. Finally, we introduce the \emph{distinguishing polynomial} for a graph G to be PD(G)=n∑k=D(G)φk(G)xk. An application to distinguishing lexicographic products of graphs is also presented.
Coauthors: Bahman Ahmadi, Fatemeh Alinaghipour (Conference Room San Felipe) |
17:05 - 17:35 |
Saeid Alikhani: Symmetry breaking in maximal outerplanar, regular and Cayley graphs ↓ The distinguishing number (index) D(G) (D′(G)) of a graph G is the least integer d such that G has a vertex (edge) labeling with d labels that is preserved only by a trivial automorphism. In this talk we consider the maximal outerplanar graphs (MOP graphs) and show that MOP graphs, except K3, can be distinguished by at most two vertex (edge) labels. We also consider the distinguishing number and distinguishing index of regular and Cayley graphs. In particular, we present a family of Cayley graphs, graphical regular representations of a group, for which the distinguishing number and the distinguishing index is two.
Coauthor: Samaneh Soltani (Conference Room San Felipe) |
19:00 - 21:00 |
Dinner (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |