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Roman Bondage Number of a Graph

The Roman dominating function on a graph $G=(V,E)$ is a function $f: V\rightarrow\{0,1,2\}$ such that each vertex $x$ with $f(x)=0$ is adjacent to at least one vertex $y$ with $f(y)=2$. The value $f(G)=\sum\limits_{u\in V(G)} f(u)$ is called the weight of $f$. The Roman domination number $γ_{\rm R}(G)$ is defined as the minimum weight of all Roman dominating functions. This paper defines the Roman bondage number $b_{\rm R}(G)$ of a nonempty graph $G=(V,E)$ to be the cardinality among all sets of edges $B\subseteq E$ for which $γ_{\rm R}(G-B)>γ_{\rm R}(G)$. Some bounds are obtained for $b_{\rm R}(G)$, and the exact values are determined for several classes of graphs. Moreover, the decision problem for $b_{\rm R}(G)$ is proved to be NP-hard even for bipartite graphs.

preprint2011arXivOpen access
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