1,604 research outputs found

    On hamiltonian colorings of block graphs

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    A hamiltonian coloring c of a graph G of order p is an assignment of colors to the vertices of G such that D(u,v)+∣c(u)−c(v)∣≥p−1D(u,v)+|c(u)-c(v)|\geq p-1 for every two distinct vertices u and v of G, where D(u,v) denoted the detour distance between u and v. The value hc(c) of a hamiltonian coloring c is the maximum color assigned to a vertex of G. The hamiltonian chromatic number, denoted by hc(G), is the min{hc(c)} taken over all hamiltonian coloring c of G. In this paper, we present a lower bound for the hamiltonian chromatic number of block graphs and give a sufficient condition to achieve the lower bound. We characterize symmetric block graphs achieving this lower bound. We present two algorithms for optimal hamiltonian coloring of symmetric block graphs.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure. A conference version appeared in the proceedings of WALCOM 201

    Shortest Reconfiguration of Colorings Under Kempe Changes

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