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The Chromatic Structure of Dense Graphs
This thesis focusses on extremal graph theory, the study of how local constraints on a graph affect its macroscopic structure. We primarily consider the chromatic structure: whether a graph has or is close to having some (low) chromatic number.
Chapter 2 is the slight exception. We consider an induced version of the classical Turán problem. Introduced by Loh, Tait, Timmons, and Zhou, the induced Turán number ex(n, {H, F-ind}) is the greatest number of edges in an n-vertex graph with no copy of H and no induced copy of F. We asymptotically determine ex(n, {H, F-ind}) for H not bipartite and F neither an independent set nor a complete bipartite graph. We also improve the upper bound for ex(n, {H, K_{2, t}-ind}) as well as the lower bound for the clique number of graphs that have some fixed edge density and no induced K_{2, t}.
The next three chapters form the heart of the thesis. Chapters 3 and 4 consider the Erdős-Simonovits question for locally r-colourable graphs: what are the structure and chromatic number of graphs with large minimum degree and where every neighbourhood is r-colourable? Chapter 3 deals with the locally bipartite case and Chapter 4 with the general case.
While the subject of Chapters 3 and 4 is a natural local to global colouring question, it is also essential for determining the minimum degree stability of H-free graphs, the focus of Chapter 5. Given a graph H of chromatic number r + 1, this asks for the minimum degree that guarantees that an H-free graph is close to r-partite. This is analogous to the classical edge stability of Erdős and Simonovits. We also consider the question for the family of graphs to which H is not homomorphic, showing that it has the same answer.
Chapter 6 considers sparse analogues of the results of Chapters 3 to 5 obtaining the thresholds at which the sparse problem degenerates away from the dense one.
Finally, Chapter 7 considers a chromatic Ramsey problem first posed by Erdős: what is the greatest chromatic number of a triangle-free graph on vertices or with m edges? We improve the best known bounds and obtain tight (up to a constant factor) bounds for the list chromatic number, answering a question of Cames van Batenburg, de Joannis de Verclos, Kang, and Pirot
Bipartite induced density in triangle-free graphs
We prove that any triangle-free graph on vertices with minimum degree at
least contains a bipartite induced subgraph of minimum degree at least
. This is sharp up to a logarithmic factor in . Relatedly, we show
that the fractional chromatic number of any such triangle-free graph is at most
the minimum of and as . This is
sharp up to constant factors. Similarly, we show that the list chromatic number
of any such triangle-free graph is at most as
.
Relatedly, we also make two conjectures. First, any triangle-free graph on
vertices has fractional chromatic number at most
as . Second, any triangle-free
graph on vertices has list chromatic number at most as
.Comment: 20 pages; in v2 added note of concurrent work and one reference; in
v3 added more notes of ensuing work and a result towards one of the
conjectures (for list colouring
Vertex arboricity of triangle-free graphs
Master's Project (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2016The vertex arboricity of a graph is the minimum number of colors needed to color the vertices so that the subgraph induced by each color class is a forest. In other words, the vertex arboricity of a graph is the fewest number of colors required in order to color a graph such that every cycle has at least two colors. Although not standard, we will refer to vertex arboricity simply as arboricity. In this paper, we discuss properties of chromatic number and k-defective chromatic number and how those properties relate to the arboricity of trianglefree graphs. In particular, we find bounds on the minimum order of a graph having arboricity three. Equivalently, we consider the largest possible vertex arboricity of triangle-free graphs of fixed order
-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
Fractional coloring of triangle-free planar graphs
We prove that every planar triangle-free graph on vertices has fractional
chromatic number at most
On the Chromatic Thresholds of Hypergraphs
Let F be a family of r-uniform hypergraphs. The chromatic threshold of F is
the infimum of all non-negative reals c such that the subfamily of F comprising
hypergraphs H with minimum degree at least has bounded
chromatic number. This parameter has a long history for graphs (r=2), and in
this paper we begin its systematic study for hypergraphs.
{\L}uczak and Thomass\'e recently proved that the chromatic threshold of the
so-called near bipartite graphs is zero, and our main contribution is to
generalize this result to r-uniform hypergraphs. For this class of hypergraphs,
we also show that the exact Tur\'an number is achieved uniquely by the complete
(r+1)-partite hypergraph with nearly equal part sizes. This is one of very few
infinite families of nondegenerate hypergraphs whose Tur\'an number is
determined exactly. In an attempt to generalize Thomassen's result that the
chromatic threshold of triangle-free graphs is 1/3, we prove bounds for the
chromatic threshold of the family of 3-uniform hypergraphs not containing {abc,
abd, cde}, the so-called generalized triangle.
In order to prove upper bounds we introduce the concept of fiber bundles,
which can be thought of as a hypergraph analogue of directed graphs. This leads
to the notion of fiber bundle dimension, a structural property of fiber bundles
that is based on the idea of Vapnik-Chervonenkis dimension in hypergraphs. Our
lower bounds follow from explicit constructions, many of which use a hypergraph
analogue of the Kneser graph. Using methods from extremal set theory, we prove
that these Kneser hypergraphs have unbounded chromatic number. This generalizes
a result of Szemer\'edi for graphs and might be of independent interest. Many
open problems remain.Comment: 37 pages, 4 figure
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