Trajectory Graphs Appearing from the Skein Problems at the Hypercube

Autores/as

  • Feliú Sagols CINVESTAV-IPN
  • Guillermo Morales-Luna CINVESTAV-IPN
  • Israel Buitron-Damaso CINVESTAV-IPNl

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13053/cys-20-1-2061

Palabras clave:

Independence problem in graph theory, Berge graphs, doubly-exponential growth.

Resumen

We formally state Skein Problems in Hamiltonian graphs and prove that they are reduced to the Independence Problem in Graph Theory. Skein problems can be widely used in cryptography, particularly, in protocols for message authentication or entities identification. Let G be a Hamiltonian graph. Given a Hamiltonian cycle H, let  be a set of pairwise disjoint sub-paths within H, P1 = [v11, : : : , vm1], : : : , Pk = [v1k, : : : , vmk] where m and k are two positive integers, then the pairs of extreme vertices V = f(v11, vm1), : : : , (v1k, vmk)g are connected by the paths at  without any crossing. Conversely, let us assume that the following problem is posed: given a collection of pairs V it is required to find a collection of pairwise disjoint paths, without any crossing, connecting each pair at V . We reduce this last problem to the Independence Problem in Graph Theory. In particular, for the case of the n-dimensional hypercube, we show that the resulting translated instances are not Berge graphs, thus the most common polynomial-time algorithms to solve the translated problem do not apply. We have built a computing system to explicitly generate the resulting graphs of the reduction to the Independence problem. Nevertheless, due to the doubly exponential growth in terms of n of these graphs, the physical computational resources are quickly exhausted.

Biografía del autor/a

Feliú Sagols, CINVESTAV-IPN

holds a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering. He is professor at Center for Research and Advanced Studies of the National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico (CINVESTAV-IPN) in Mexico City, within the Mathematics Department. His areas of interest are computing, combinatorics, graph theory, and topological graph theory. He has developed several computational tools to represent combinatorial maps, producing efficient methods to build GIS.

Guillermo Morales-Luna, CINVESTAV-IPN

is researcher at the Computer Science Department at CINVESTAV-IPN in Mexico City. He holds a Bachelor degree in Physics and Mathematics from the National Polytechnic Institute in Mexico, an M.Sc. in Mathematics from CINVESTAV-IPN and a Ph.D. in Mathematics from the Mathematical Institute of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw, Poland. His areas of interest are the mathematical foundations of computer science, logic and automatic deduction, cryptography and complexity theory. He has taught at the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) and BUAP and he has spent two sabbatical years at the Mexican Petroleum Institute (IMP).

Israel Buitron-Damaso, CINVESTAV-IPNl

is a Ph.D. student at the Computer Science Department in CINVESTAV-IPN in Mexico City. He holds a Bachelor degree in Computer Systems Engineering from IPN in Mexico and an M.Sc. in Computer Science from CINVESTAV-IPN. His research interests include cryptography, authentication protocols, information security, among others.

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Publicado

2016-03-31