Distinguishing Cartesian Powers of Graphs

  • Michael O. Albertson

Abstract

Given a graph G, a labeling c:V(G){1,2,,d} is said to be d-distinguishing if the only element in Aut(G) that preserves the labels is the identity. The distinguishing number of G, denoted by D(G), is the minimum d such that G has a d-distinguishing labeling. If GH denotes the Cartesian product of G and H, let G2=GG and Gr=GGr1. A graph G is said to be prime with respect to the Cartesian product if whenever GG1G2, then either G1 or G2 is a singleton vertex. This paper proves that if G is a connected, prime graph, then D(Gr)=2 whenever r4.

Published
2005-09-19
Article Number
N17