Trees Whose Even-Degree Vertices Induce a Path are Antimagic

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Abstract

An antimagic labeling of a connected graph G is a bijection from the set of edges E(G) to {1, 2,.., |E(G)|} such that all vertex sums are pairwise distinct, where the vertex sum at vertex v is the sum of the labels assigned to edges incident to v. A graph is called antimagic if it has an antimagic labeling. In 1990, Hartsfield and Ringel conjectured that every simple connected graph other than K2 is antimagic; however the conjecture remains open, even for trees. In this note we prove that trees whose vertices of even degree induce a path are antimagic, extending a result given by Liang, Wong, and Zhu [Anti-magic labeling of trees, Discrete Math. 331 (2014) 9-14].

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Lozano, A., Mora, M., Seara, C., & Tey, J. (2022). Trees Whose Even-Degree Vertices Induce a Path are Antimagic. Discussiones Mathematicae - Graph Theory, 42(3), 959–966. https://doi.org/10.7151/dmgt.2322

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