A Note on Roman Domination of Digraphs

A vertex subset S of a digraph D is called a dominating set of D if every vertex not in S is adjacent from at least one vertex in S. The domination number of a digraph D, denoted by γ(D), is the minimum cardinality of a dominating set of D. A Roman dominating function (RDF) on a digraph D is a funct...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chen Xiaodan, Hao Guoliang, Xie Zhihong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zielona Góra 2019-02-01
Series:Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7151/dmgt.2067
Description
Summary:A vertex subset S of a digraph D is called a dominating set of D if every vertex not in S is adjacent from at least one vertex in S. The domination number of a digraph D, denoted by γ(D), is the minimum cardinality of a dominating set of D. A Roman dominating function (RDF) on a digraph D is a function f : V (D) → {0, 1, 2} satisfying the condition that every vertex v with f(v) = 0 has an in-neighbor u with f(u) = 2. The weight of an RDF f is the value ω (f) =Σv∈V(D)f(v). The Roman domination number of a digraph D, denoted by γR(D), is the minimum weight of an RDF on D. In this paper, for any integer k with 2 ≤ k ≤ γ(D), we characterize the digraphs D of order n ≥ 4 with δ−(D) ≥ 1 for which γR(D) = (D) + k holds. We also characterize the digraphs D of order n ≥ k with γR(D) = k for any positive integer k. In addition, we present a Nordhaus-Gaddum bound on the Roman domination number of digraphs.
ISSN:2083-5892