302 research outputs found
On vertex coloring without monochromatic triangles
We study a certain relaxation of the classic vertex coloring problem, namely,
a coloring of vertices of undirected, simple graphs, such that there are no
monochromatic triangles. We give the first classification of the problem in
terms of classic and parametrized algorithms. Several computational complexity
results are also presented, which improve on the previous results found in the
literature. We propose the new structural parameter for undirected, simple
graphs -- the triangle-free chromatic number . We bound by
other known structural parameters. We also present two classes of graphs with
interesting coloring properties, that play pivotal role in proving useful
observation about our problem. We give/ask several conjectures/questions
throughout this paper to encourage new research in the area of graph coloring.Comment: Extended abstrac
Steinitz Theorems for Orthogonal Polyhedra
We define a simple orthogonal polyhedron to be a three-dimensional polyhedron
with the topology of a sphere in which three mutually-perpendicular edges meet
at each vertex. By analogy to Steinitz's theorem characterizing the graphs of
convex polyhedra, we find graph-theoretic characterizations of three classes of
simple orthogonal polyhedra: corner polyhedra, which can be drawn by isometric
projection in the plane with only one hidden vertex, xyz polyhedra, in which
each axis-parallel line through a vertex contains exactly one other vertex, and
arbitrary simple orthogonal polyhedra. In particular, the graphs of xyz
polyhedra are exactly the bipartite cubic polyhedral graphs, and every
bipartite cubic polyhedral graph with a 4-connected dual graph is the graph of
a corner polyhedron. Based on our characterizations we find efficient
algorithms for constructing orthogonal polyhedra from their graphs.Comment: 48 pages, 31 figure
Vertex Arboricity of Toroidal Graphs with a Forbidden Cycle
The vertex arboricity of a graph is the minimum such that
can be partitioned into sets where each set induces a forest. For a
planar graph , it is known that . In two recent papers, it was
proved that planar graphs without -cycles for some
have vertex arboricity at most 2. For a toroidal graph , it is known that
. Let us consider the following question: do toroidal graphs
without -cycles have vertex arboricity at most 2? It was known that the
question is true for k=3, and recently, Zhang proved the question is true for
. Since a complete graph on 5 vertices is a toroidal graph without any
-cycles for and has vertex arboricity at least three, the only
unknown case was k=4. We solve this case in the affirmative; namely, we show
that toroidal graphs without 4-cycles have vertex arboricity at most 2.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Planar graph coloring avoiding monochromatic subgraphs: trees and paths make things difficult
We consider the problem of coloring a planar graph with the minimum number of colors such that each color class avoids one or more forbidden graphs as subgraphs. We perform a detailed study of the computational complexity of this problem
-WORM colorings of graphs: Lower chromatic number and gaps in the chromatic spectrum
A -WORM coloring of a graph is an assignment of colors to the
vertices in such a way that the vertices of each -subgraph of get
precisely two colors. We study graphs which admit at least one such
coloring. We disprove a conjecture of Goddard et al. [Congr. Numer., 219 (2014)
161--173] who asked whether every such graph has a -WORM coloring with two
colors. In fact for every integer there exists a -WORM colorable
graph in which the minimum number of colors is exactly . There also exist
-WORM colorable graphs which have a -WORM coloring with two colors
and also with colors but no coloring with any of colors. We
also prove that it is NP-hard to determine the minimum number of colors and
NP-complete to decide -colorability for every (and remains
intractable even for graphs of maximum degree 9 if ). On the other hand,
we prove positive results for -degenerate graphs with small , also
including planar graphs. Moreover we point out a fundamental connection with
the theory of the colorings of mixed hypergraphs. We list many open problems at
the end.Comment: 18 page
Defective and Clustered Graph Colouring
Consider the following two ways to colour the vertices of a graph where the
requirement that adjacent vertices get distinct colours is relaxed. A colouring
has "defect" if each monochromatic component has maximum degree at most
. A colouring has "clustering" if each monochromatic component has at
most vertices. This paper surveys research on these types of colourings,
where the first priority is to minimise the number of colours, with small
defect or small clustering as a secondary goal. List colouring variants are
also considered. The following graph classes are studied: outerplanar graphs,
planar graphs, graphs embeddable in surfaces, graphs with given maximum degree,
graphs with given maximum average degree, graphs excluding a given subgraph,
graphs with linear crossing number, linklessly or knotlessly embeddable graphs,
graphs with given Colin de Verdi\`ere parameter, graphs with given
circumference, graphs excluding a fixed graph as an immersion, graphs with
given thickness, graphs with given stack- or queue-number, graphs excluding
as a minor, graphs excluding as a minor, and graphs excluding
an arbitrary graph as a minor. Several open problems are discussed.Comment: This is a preliminary version of a dynamic survey to be published in
the Electronic Journal of Combinatoric
Red-blue clique partitions and (1-1)-transversals
Motivated by the problem of Gallai on -transversals of -intervals,
it was proved by the authors in 1969 that if the edges of a complete graph
are colored with red and blue (both colors can appear on an edge) so that there
is no monochromatic induced and then the vertices of can be
partitioned into a red and a blue clique. Aharoni, Berger, Chudnovsky and Ziani
recently strengthened this by showing that it is enough to assume that there is
no induced monochromatic and there is no induced in {\em one of the
colors}. Here this is strengthened further, it is enough to assume that there
is no monochromatic induced and there is no on which both color
classes induce a .
We also answer a question of Kaiser and Rabinovich, giving an example of six
-convex sets in the plane such that any three intersect but there is no
-transversal for them
Graph coloring with no large monochromatic components
For a graph G and an integer t we let mcc_t(G) be the smallest m such that
there exists a coloring of the vertices of G by t colors with no monochromatic
connected subgraph having more than m vertices. Let F be any nontrivial
minor-closed family of graphs. We show that \mcc_2(G) = O(n^{2/3}) for any
n-vertex graph G \in F. This bound is asymptotically optimal and it is attained
for planar graphs. More generally, for every such F and every fixed t we show
that mcc_t(G)=O(n^{2/(t+1)}). On the other hand we have examples of graphs G
with no K_{t+3} minor and with mcc_t(G)=\Omega(n^{2/(2t-1)}).
It is also interesting to consider graphs of bounded degrees. Haxell, Szabo,
and Tardos proved \mcc_2(G) \leq 20000 for every graph G of maximum degree 5.
We show that there are n-vertex 7-regular graphs G with \mcc_2(G)=\Omega(n),
and more sharply, for every \epsilon>0 there exists c_\epsilon>0 and n-vertex
graphs of maximum degree 7, average degree at most 6+\epsilon for all
subgraphs, and with mcc_2(G)\ge c_\eps n. For 6-regular graphs it is known only
that the maximum order of magnitude of \mcc_2 is between \sqrt n and n.
We also offer a Ramsey-theoretic perspective of the quantity \mcc_t(G).Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
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