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  • Cited by 2
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    This (lowercase (translateProductType product.productType)) has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by CrossRef.

    Fleischner, Herbert Genest, François and Jackson, Bill 2007. Compatible circuit decompositions of 4-regular graphs. Journal of Graph Theory, Vol. 56, Issue. 3, p. 227.

    Alspach, Brian Liu, Yi-Ping and Zhang, Cun-Quan 1996. Nowhere-Zero 4-Flows and Cayley Graphs on Solvable Groups. SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics, Vol. 9, Issue. 1, p. 151.

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  • Print publication year: 1993
  • Online publication date: March 2010

On circuit covers, circuit decompositions and Euler tours of graphs

Summary

Introduction

I will review certain results and problems concerning the covering of the edge set of a graph with circuits or Euler tours. The areas I shall consider are:

Faithful circuit covers of weighted graphs.

Shortest circuit covers of bridgeless graphs.

Compatible circuit decompositions and Euler tours of Eulerian graphs.

Even circuit decompositions of Eulerian graphs.

I will describe interconnections between these areas and also indicate connections with other areas of combinatorics: matroids, isotropic systems, edge colouring of graphs, latin squares, nowhere-zero flows in graphs, and the Chinese postman problem.

Throughout this survey my graphs will be finite and without loops, although they may contain multiple edges. By a closed walk in a graph G, I will mean an alternating sequence of vertices and edges which starts and ends at the same vertex and is such that consecutive vertices and edges are incident. The length of the walk is the number of edges in the sequence. A tour is a closed walk which does not repeat edges. An Euler tour of G is a tour which traverses every edge of G. We shall say that a graph is Eulerian if it has an Euler tour. A tour decomposition of G is a partition of E(G) into (edge sets of) tours. We will consider an Euler tour of G to be a tour decomposition into exactly one tour. A circuit is a tour which does not repeat vertices, except when the first vertex is repeated as the last.

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Surveys in Combinatorics, 1993
  • Online ISBN: 9780511662089
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511662089
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