Covering Walks in Graphs is aimed at researchers and graduate students
in the graph theory community and provides a comprehensive treatment on
measures of two well studied graphical properties, namely Hamiltonicity
and traversability in graphs. This text looks into the famous Kӧnigsberg
Bridge Problem, the Chinese Postman Problem, the Icosian Game and the
Traveling Salesman Problem as well as well-known mathematicians who were
involved in these problems. The concepts of different spanning walks
with examples and present classical results on Hamiltonian numbers and
upper Hamiltonian numbers of graphs are described; in some cases, the
authors provide proofs of these results to illustrate the beauty and
complexity of this area of research. Two new concepts of traceable
numbers of graphs and traceable numbers of vertices of a graph which
were inspired by and closely related to Hamiltonian numbers are
introduced. Results are illustrated on these two concepts and the
relationship between traceable concepts and Hamiltonian concepts are
examined. Describes several variations of traceable numbers, which
provide new frame works for several well-known Hamiltonian concepts and
produce interesting new results.