Doctoral Degrees (Industrial Engineering)
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Browsing Doctoral Degrees (Industrial Engineering) by browse.metadata.advisor "Burger, A. P."
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- ItemEdge criticality in secure graph domination(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2014-12) De Villiers, Anton Pierre; Van Vuuren, J. H.; Burger, A. P.; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Engineering. Department of Industrial Engineering.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The domination number of a graph is the cardinality of a smallest subset of its vertex set with the property that each vertex of the graph is in the subset or adjacent to a vertex in the subset. This graph parameter has been studied extensively since its introduction during the early 1960s and finds application in the generic setting where the vertices of the graph denote physical entities that are typically geographically dispersed and have to be monitored efficiently, while the graph edges model links between these entities which enable guards, stationed at the vertices, to monitor adjacent entities. In the above application, the guards remain stationary at the entities. In 2005, this constraint was, however, relaxed by the introduction of a new domination-related parameter, called the secure domination number. In this relaxed, dynamic setting, each unoccupied entity is defended by a guard stationed at an adjacent entity who can travel along an edge to the unoccupied entity in order to resolve a security threat that may occur there, after which the resulting configuration of guards at the entities is again required to be a dominating set of the graph. The secure domination number of a graph is the smallest number of guards that can be placed on its vertices so as to satisfy these requirements. In this generalised setting, the notion of edge removal is important, because one might seek the cost, in terms of the additional number of guards required, of protecting the complex of entities modelled by the graph if a number of edges in the graph were to fail (i.e. a number of links were to be eliminated form the complex, thereby disqualifying guards from moving along such disabled links). A comprehensive survey of the literature on secure graph domination is conducted in this dissertation. Descriptions of related, generalised graph protection parameters are also given. The classes of graphs with secure domination number 1, 2 or 3 are characterised and a result on the number of defenders in any minimum secure dominating set of a graph without end-vertices is presented, after which it is shown that the decision problem associated with computing the secure domination number of an arbitrary graph is NP-complete. Two exponential-time algorithms and a binary programming problem formulation are presented for computing the secure domination number of an arbitrary graph, while a linear algorithm is put forward for computing the secure domination number of an arbitrary tree. The practical efficiencies of these algorithms are compared in the context of small graphs. The smallest and largest increase in the secure domination number of a graph are also considered when a fixed number of edges are removed from the graph. Two novel cost functions are introduced for this purpose. General bounds on these two cost functions are established, and exact values of or tighter bounds on the cost functions are determined for various infinite classes of special graphs. Threshold information is finally established in respect of the number of possible edge removals from a graph before increasing its secure domination number. The notions of criticality and stability are introduced and studied in this respect, focussing on the smallest number of arbitrary edges whose deletion necessarily increases the secure domination number of the resulting graph, and the largest number of arbitrary edges whose deletion necessarily does not increase the secure domination number of the resulting graph.