628 research outputs found

    Defective Coloring on Classes of Perfect Graphs

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    In Defective Coloring we are given a graph GG and two integers Ο‡d\chi_d, Ξ”βˆ—\Delta^* and are asked if we can Ο‡d\chi_d-color GG so that the maximum degree induced by any color class is at most Ξ”βˆ—\Delta^*. We show that this natural generalization of Coloring is much harder on several basic graph classes. In particular, we show that it is NP-hard on split graphs, even when one of the two parameters Ο‡d\chi_d, Ξ”βˆ—\Delta^* is set to the smallest possible fixed value that does not trivialize the problem (Ο‡d=2\chi_d = 2 or Ξ”βˆ—=1\Delta^* = 1). Together with a simple treewidth-based DP algorithm this completely determines the complexity of the problem also on chordal graphs. We then consider the case of cographs and show that, somewhat surprisingly, Defective Coloring turns out to be one of the few natural problems which are NP-hard on this class. We complement this negative result by showing that Defective Coloring is in P for cographs if either Ο‡d\chi_d or Ξ”βˆ—\Delta^* is fixed; that it is in P for trivially perfect graphs; and that it admits a sub-exponential time algorithm for cographs when both Ο‡d\chi_d and Ξ”βˆ—\Delta^* are unbounded

    Beyond Ohba's Conjecture: A bound on the choice number of kk-chromatic graphs with nn vertices

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    Let ch(G)\text{ch}(G) denote the choice number of a graph GG (also called "list chromatic number" or "choosability" of GG). Noel, Reed, and Wu proved the conjecture of Ohba that ch(G)=Ο‡(G)\text{ch}(G)=\chi(G) when ∣V(G)βˆ£β‰€2Ο‡(G)+1|V(G)|\le 2\chi(G)+1. We extend this to a general upper bound: ch(G)≀max⁑{Ο‡(G),⌈(∣V(G)∣+Ο‡(G)βˆ’1)/3βŒ‰}\text{ch}(G)\le \max\{\chi(G),\lceil({|V(G)|+\chi(G)-1})/{3}\rceil\}. Our result is sharp for ∣V(G)βˆ£β‰€3Ο‡(G)|V(G)|\le 3\chi(G) using Ohba's examples, and it improves the best-known upper bound for ch(K4,…,4)\text{ch}(K_{4,\dots,4}).Comment: 14 page

    Three-coloring triangle-free graphs on surfaces V. Coloring planar graphs with distant anomalies

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    We settle a problem of Havel by showing that there exists an absolute constant d such that if G is a planar graph in which every two distinct triangles are at distance at least d, then G is 3-colorable. In fact, we prove a more general theorem. Let G be a planar graph, and let H be a set of connected subgraphs of G, each of bounded size, such that every two distinct members of H are at least a specified distance apart and all triangles of G are contained in \bigcup{H}. We give a sufficient condition for the existence of a 3-coloring phi of G such that for every B\in H, the restriction of phi to B is constrained in a specified way.Comment: 26 pages, no figures. Updated presentatio
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