256 research outputs found
A note on circular chromatic number of graphs with large girth and similar problems
In this short note, we extend the result of Galluccio, Goddyn, and Hell,
which states that graphs of large girth excluding a minor are nearly bipartite.
We also prove a similar result for the oriented chromatic number, from which
follows in particular that graphs of large girth excluding a minor have
oriented chromatic number at most , and for the th chromatic number
, from which follows in particular that graphs of large girth
excluding a minor have
On the Complexity of Digraph Colourings and Vertex Arboricity
It has been shown by Bokal et al. that deciding 2-colourability of digraphs
is an NP-complete problem. This result was later on extended by Feder et al. to
prove that deciding whether a digraph has a circular -colouring is
NP-complete for all rational . In this paper, we consider the complexity
of corresponding decision problems for related notions of fractional colourings
for digraphs and graphs, including the star dichromatic number, the fractional
dichromatic number and the circular vertex arboricity. We prove the following
results:
Deciding if the star dichromatic number of a digraph is at most is
NP-complete for every rational .
Deciding if the fractional dichromatic number of a digraph is at most is
NP-complete for every .
Deciding if the circular vertex arboricity of a graph is at most is
NP-complete for every rational .
To show these results, different techniques are required in each case. In
order to prove the first result, we relate the star dichromatic number to a new
notion of homomorphisms between digraphs, called circular homomorphisms, which
might be of independent interest. We provide a classification of the
computational complexities of the corresponding homomorphism colouring problems
similar to the one derived by Feder et al. for acyclic homomorphisms.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
Unit Grid Intersection Graphs: Recognition and Properties
It has been known since 1991 that the problem of recognizing grid
intersection graphs is NP-complete. Here we use a modified argument of the
above result to show that even if we restrict to the class of unit grid
intersection graphs (UGIGs), the recognition remains hard, as well as for all
graph classes contained inbetween. The result holds even when considering only
graphs with arbitrarily large girth. Furthermore, we ask the question of
representing UGIGs on grids of minimal size. We show that the UGIGs that can be
represented in a square of side length 1+epsilon, for a positive epsilon no
greater than 1, are exactly the orthogonal ray graphs, and that there exist
families of trees that need an arbitrarily large grid
Boxicity and Cubicity of Asteroidal Triple free graphs
An axis parallel -dimensional box is the Cartesian product where each is a closed interval on the real line.
The {\it boxicity} of a graph , denoted as \boxi(G), is the minimum
integer such that can be represented as the intersection graph of a
collection of -dimensional boxes. An axis parallel unit cube in
-dimensional space or a -cube is defined as the Cartesian product where each is a closed interval on the
real line of the form . The {\it cubicity} of , denoted as
\cub(G), is the minimum integer such that can be represented as the
intersection graph of a collection of -cubes.
Let denote a star graph on nodes. We define {\it claw number} of
a graph as the largest positive integer such that is an induced
subgraph of and denote it as \claw.
Let be an AT-free graph with chromatic number and claw number
\claw. In this paper we will show that \boxi(G) \leq \chi(G) and this bound
is tight. We also show that \cub(G) \leq \boxi(G)(\ceil{\log_2 \claw} +2)
\chi(G)(\ceil{\log_2 \claw} +2). If is an AT-free graph having
girth at least 5 then \boxi(G) \leq 2 and therefore \cub(G) \leq
2\ceil{\log_2 \claw} +4.Comment: 15 pages: We are replacing our earlier paper regarding boxicity of
permutation graphs with a superior result. Here we consider the boxicity of
AT-free graphs, which is a super class of permutation graph
An approximability-related parameter on graphs―-properties and applications
Graph TheoryInternational audienceWe introduce a binary parameter on optimisation problems called separation. The parameter is used to relate the approximation ratios of different optimisation problems; in other words, we can convert approximability (and non-approximability) result for one problem into (non)-approximability results for other problems. Our main application is the problem (weighted) maximum H-colourable subgraph (Max H-Col), which is a restriction of the general maximum constraint satisfaction problem (Max CSP) to a single, binary, and symmetric relation. Using known approximation ratios for Max k-cut, we obtain general asymptotic approximability results for Max H-Col for an arbitrary graph H. For several classes of graphs, we provide near-optimal results under the unique games conjecture. We also investigate separation as a graph parameter. In this vein, we study its properties on circular complete graphs. Furthermore, we establish a close connection to work by Šámal on cubical colourings of graphs. This connection shows that our parameter is closely related to a special type of chromatic number. We believe that this insight may turn out to be crucial for understanding the behaviour of the parameter, and in the longer term, for understanding the approximability of optimisation problems such as Max H-Col
Generalized Colorings of Graphs
A graph coloring is an assignment of labels called “colors” to certain elements of a graph subject to certain constraints. The proper vertex coloring is the most common type of graph coloring, where each vertex of a graph is assigned one color such that no two adjacent vertices share the same color, with the objective of minimizing the number of colors used. One can obtain various generalizations of the proper vertex coloring problem, by strengthening or relaxing the constraints or changing the objective. We study several types of such generalizations in this thesis. Series-parallel graphs are multigraphs that have no K4-minor. We provide bounds on their fractional and circular chromatic numbers and the defective version of these pa-rameters. In particular we show that the fractional chromatic number of any series-parallel graph of odd girth k is exactly 2k/(k − 1), confirming a conjecture by Wang and Yu. We introduce a generalization of defective coloring: each vertex of a graph is assigned a fraction of each color, with the total amount of colors at each vertex summing to 1. We define the fractional defect of a vertex v to be the sum of the overlaps with each neighbor of v, and the fractional defect of the graph to be the maximum of the defects over all vertices. We provide results on the minimum fractional defect of 2-colorings of some graphs. We also propose some open questions and conjectures. Given a (not necessarily proper) vertex coloring of a graph, a subgraph is called rainbow if all its vertices receive different colors, and monochromatic if all its vertices receive the same color. We consider several types of coloring here: a no-rainbow-F coloring of G is a coloring of the vertices of G without rainbow subgraph isomorphic to F ; an F -WORM coloring of G is a coloring of the vertices of G without rainbow or monochromatic subgraph isomorphic to F ; an (M, R)-WORM coloring of G is a coloring of the vertices of G with neither a monochromatic subgraph isomorphic to M nor a rainbow subgraph isomorphic to R. We present some results on these concepts especially with regards to the existence of colorings, complexity, and optimization within certain graph classes. Our focus is on the case that F , M or R is a path, cycle, star, or clique
Digraphs and homomorphisms: Cores, colorings, and constructions
A natural digraph analogue of the graph-theoretic concept of an `independent set\u27 is that of an acyclic set, namely a set of vertices not spanning a directed cycle. Hence a digraph analogue of a graph coloring is a decomposition of the vertex set into acyclic sets
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