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Abstract In 2003, Bohman, Frieze, and Martin initiated the study of randomly perturbed graphs and digraphs. For digraphs, they showed that for every$$\alpha \gt 0$$, there exists a constant$$C$$such that for every$$n$$-vertex digraph of minimum semi-degree at least$$\alpha n$$, if one adds$$Cn$$random edges then asymptotically almost surely the resulting digraph contains a consistently oriented Hamilton cycle. We generalize their result, showing that the hypothesis of this theorem actually asymptotically almost surely ensures the existence of every orientation of a cycle of every possible length, simultaneously. Moreover, we prove that we can relax the minimum semi-degree condition to a minimum total degree condition when considering orientations of a cycle that do not contain a large number of vertices of indegree$$1$$. Our proofs make use of a variant of an absorbing method of Montgomery.more » « less
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Abstract LetXbe ann-element point set in thek-dimensional unit cube$$[0,1]^k$$ where$$k \ge 2$$ . According to an old result of Bollobás and Meir (Oper Res Lett 11:19–21, 1992) , there exists a cycle (tour)$$x_1, x_2, \ldots , x_n$$ through thenpoints, such that$$\left( \sum _{i=1}^n |x_i - x_{i+1}|^k \right) ^{1/k} \le c_k$$ , where$$|x-y|$$ is the Euclidean distance betweenxandy, and$$c_k$$ is an absolute constant that depends only onk, where$$x_{n+1} \equiv x_1$$ . From the other direction, for every$$k \ge 2$$ and$$n \ge 2$$ , there existnpoints in$$[0,1]^k$$ , such that their shortest tour satisfies$$\left( \sum _{i=1}^n |x_i - x_{i+1}|^k \right) ^{1/k} = 2^{1/k} \cdot \sqrt{k}$$ . For the plane, the best constant is$$c_2=2$$ and this is the only exact value known. Bollobás and Meir showed that one can take$$c_k = 9 \left( \frac{2}{3} \right) ^{1/k} \cdot \sqrt{k}$$ for every$$k \ge 3$$ and conjectured that the best constant is$$c_k = 2^{1/k} \cdot \sqrt{k}$$ , for every$$k \ge 2$$ . Here we significantly improve the upper bound and show that one can take$$c_k = 3 \sqrt{5} \left( \frac{2}{3} \right) ^{1/k} \cdot \sqrt{k}$$ or$$c_k = 2.91 \sqrt{k} \ (1+o_k(1))$$ . Our bounds are constructive. We also show that$$c_3 \ge 2^{7/6}$$ , which disproves the conjecture for$$k=3$$ . Connections to matching problems, power assignment problems, related problems, including algorithms, are discussed in this context. A slightly revised version of the Bollobás–Meir conjecture is proposed.more » « less
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