Nanoti, Saraswati GirishSaraswati GirishNanotiDr Neeldhara Misra2025-12-172025-12-172025-12-1710.4230/LIPIcs.FSTTCS.2025.45https://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/IITG2025/33686The eternal vertex cover game is played between an attacker and a defender on an undirected graph G. The defender identifies k vertices to position guards initially. The attacker, on their turn, attacks an edge e, and the defender must move a guard along e to defend the attack. The defender may move other guards as well, under the constraint that every guard moves at most once and to a neighboring vertex. The smallest number of guards required to defend attacks forever is called the eternal vertex cover number of G, denoted evc(G). For any graph G, evc(G) is at least mvc(G) (the vertex cover number of G). A graph is Spartan if evc(G) = mvc(G). It is known that a bipartite graph is Spartan if and only if every edge belongs to a perfect matching. We show that the only König graphs that are Spartan are the bipartite Spartan graphs. We also give new lower bounds for evc(G), generalizing a known lower bound based on cut vertices. We finally show a new matching-based characterization of all Spartan graphs.en-USEternal Vertex CoverVertex CoverK�nig GraphsSpartan GraphsMatchingsA characterization of Spartan graphs and new lower bounds for eternal vertex coverConference Paper