Zero forcing and power domination are iterative processes on graphs where an initial set of vertices are observed, and additional vertices become observed based on some rules. In both cases, the goal is to eventually observe the entire graph using the fewest number of initial vertices. The concept of k-power domination was introduced by Chang et al. (2012) as a generalization of power domination and standard graph domination. Independently, k-forcing was defined by Amos et al. (2015) to generalize zero forcing. In this paper, we combine the study of k-forcing and k-power domination, providing a new approach to analyze both processes. We give a relationship between the k-forcing and the k-power domination numbers of a graph that bounds one in terms of the other. We also obtain results using the contraction of subgraphs that allow the parallel computation of k-forcing and k-power dominating sets.
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/leslie-hogben/85/
This is a manuscript of the article Ferrero, Daniela, Leslie Hogben, Franklin HJ Kenter, and Michael Young. "The relationship between k-forcing and k-power domination." Discrete Mathematics (2018): 1789-1797. DOI: 10.1016/j.disc.2017.10.031.