877 research outputs found

    Complexity of colouring problems restricted to unichord-free and \{square,unichord\}-free graphs

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    A \emph{unichord} in a graph is an edge that is the unique chord of a cycle. A \emph{square} is an induced cycle on four vertices. A graph is \emph{unichord-free} if none of its edges is a unichord. We give a slight restatement of a known structure theorem for unichord-free graphs and use it to show that, with the only exception of the complete graph K4K_4, every square-free, unichord-free graph of maximum degree~3 can be total-coloured with four colours. Our proof can be turned into a polynomial time algorithm that actually outputs the colouring. This settles the class of square-free, unichord-free graphs as a class for which edge-colouring is NP-complete but total-colouring is polynomial

    Reconfiguration in bounded bandwidth and treedepth

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    We show that several reconfiguration problems known to be PSPACE-complete remain so even when limited to graphs of bounded bandwidth. The essential step is noticing the similarity to very limited string rewriting systems, whose ability to directly simulate Turing Machines is classically known. This resolves a question posed open in [Bonsma P., 2012]. On the other hand, we show that a large class of reconfiguration problems becomes tractable on graphs of bounded treedepth, and that this result is in some sense tight.Comment: 14 page

    Near-colorings: non-colorable graphs and NP-completeness

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    A graph G is (d_1,..,d_l)-colorable if the vertex set of G can be partitioned into subsets V_1,..,V_l such that the graph G[V_i] induced by the vertices of V_i has maximum degree at most d_i for all 1 <= i <= l. In this paper, we focus on complexity aspects of such colorings when l=2,3. More precisely, we prove that, for any fixed integers k,j,g with (k,j) distinct form (0,0) and g >= 3, either every planar graph with girth at least g is (k,j)-colorable or it is NP-complete to determine whether a planar graph with girth at least g is (k,j)-colorable. Also, for any fixed integer k, it is NP-complete to determine whether a planar graph that is either (0,0,0)-colorable or non-(k,k,1)-colorable is (0,0,0)-colorable. Additionally, we exhibit non-(3,1)-colorable planar graphs with girth 5 and non-(2,0)-colorable planar graphs with girth 7

    On First-Order Definable Colorings

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    We address the problem of characterizing HH-coloring problems that are first-order definable on a fixed class of relational structures. In this context, we give several characterizations of a homomorphism dualities arising in a class of structure

    Kernelization and Sparseness: the case of Dominating Set

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    We prove that for every positive integer rr and for every graph class G\mathcal G of bounded expansion, the rr-Dominating Set problem admits a linear kernel on graphs from G\mathcal G. Moreover, when G\mathcal G is only assumed to be nowhere dense, then we give an almost linear kernel on G\mathcal G for the classic Dominating Set problem, i.e., for the case r=1r=1. These results generalize a line of previous research on finding linear kernels for Dominating Set and rr-Dominating Set. However, the approach taken in this work, which is based on the theory of sparse graphs, is radically different and conceptually much simpler than the previous approaches. We complement our findings by showing that for the closely related Connected Dominating Set problem, the existence of such kernelization algorithms is unlikely, even though the problem is known to admit a linear kernel on HH-topological-minor-free graphs. Also, we prove that for any somewhere dense class G\mathcal G, there is some rr for which rr-Dominating Set is W[22]-hard on G\mathcal G. Thus, our results fall short of proving a sharp dichotomy for the parameterized complexity of rr-Dominating Set on subgraph-monotone graph classes: we conjecture that the border of tractability lies exactly between nowhere dense and somewhere dense graph classes.Comment: v2: new author, added results for r-Dominating Sets in bounded expansion graph

    Holant Problems for Regular Graphs with Complex Edge Functions

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    We prove a complexity dichotomy theorem for Holant Problems on 3-regular graphs with an arbitrary complex-valued edge function. Three new techniques are introduced: (1) higher dimensional iterations in interpolation; (2) Eigenvalue Shifted Pairs, which allow us to prove that a pair of combinatorial gadgets in combination succeed in proving #P-hardness; and (3) algebraic symmetrization, which significantly lowers the symbolic complexity of the proof for computational complexity. With holographic reductions the classification theorem also applies to problems beyond the basic model.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, added proofs for full versio
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