938 research outputs found

    Distance colouring without one cycle length

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    We consider distance colourings in graphs of maximum degree at most dd and how excluding one fixed cycle length \ell affects the number of colours required as dd\to\infty. For vertex-colouring and t1t\ge 1, if any two distinct vertices connected by a path of at most tt edges are required to be coloured differently, then a reduction by a logarithmic (in dd) factor against the trivial bound O(dt)O(d^t) can be obtained by excluding an odd cycle length 3t\ell \ge 3t if tt is odd or by excluding an even cycle length 2t+2\ell \ge 2t+2. For edge-colouring and t2t\ge 2, if any two distinct edges connected by a path of fewer than tt edges are required to be coloured differently, then excluding an even cycle length 2t\ell \ge 2t is sufficient for a logarithmic factor reduction. For t2t\ge 2, neither of the above statements are possible for other parity combinations of \ell and tt. These results can be considered extensions of results due to Johansson (1996) and Mahdian (2000), and are related to open problems of Alon and Mohar (2002) and Kaiser and Kang (2014).Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur

    Some snarks are worse than others

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    Many conjectures and open problems in graph theory can either be reduced to cubic graphs or are directly stated for cubic graphs. Furthermore, it is known that for a lot of problems, a counterexample must be a snark, i.e. a bridgeless cubic graph which is not 3--edge-colourable. In this paper we deal with the fact that the family of potential counterexamples to many interesting conjectures can be narrowed even further to the family S5{\cal S}_{\geq 5} of bridgeless cubic graphs whose edge set cannot be covered with four perfect matchings. The Cycle Double Cover Conjecture, the Shortest Cycle Cover Conjecture and the Fan-Raspaud Conjecture are examples of statements for which S5{\cal S}_{\geq 5} is crucial. In this paper, we study parameters which have the potential to further refine S5{\cal S}_{\geq 5} and thus enlarge the set of cubic graphs for which the mentioned conjectures can be verified. We show that S5{\cal S}_{\geq 5} can be naturally decomposed into subsets with increasing complexity, thereby producing a natural scale for proving these conjectures. More precisely, we consider the following parameters and questions: given a bridgeless cubic graph, (i) how many perfect matchings need to be added, (ii) how many copies of the same perfect matching need to be added, and (iii) how many 2--factors need to be added so that the resulting regular graph is Class I? We present new results for these parameters and we also establish some strong relations between these problems and some long-standing conjectures.Comment: 27 pages, 16 figure

    New Bounds for Facial Nonrepetitive Colouring

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    We prove that the facial nonrepetitive chromatic number of any outerplanar graph is at most 11 and of any planar graph is at most 22.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure

    Problems in extremal graph theory

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    We consider a variety of problems in extremal graph and set theory. The {\em chromatic number} of GG, χ(G)\chi(G), is the smallest integer kk such that GG is kk-colorable. The {\it square} of GG, written G2G^2, is the supergraph of GG in which also vertices within distance 2 of each other in GG are adjacent. A graph HH is a {\it minor} of GG if HH can be obtained from a subgraph of GG by contracting edges. We show that the upper bound for χ(G2)\chi(G^2) conjectured by Wegner (1977) for planar graphs holds when GG is a K4K_4-minor-free graph. We also show that χ(G2)\chi(G^2) is equal to the bound only when G2G^2 contains a complete graph of that order. One of the central problems of extremal hypergraph theory is finding the maximum number of edges in a hypergraph that does not contain a specific forbidden structure. We consider as a forbidden structure a fixed number of members that have empty common intersection as well as small union. We obtain a sharp upper bound on the size of uniform hypergraphs that do not contain this structure, when the number of vertices is sufficiently large. Our result is strong enough to imply the same sharp upper bound for several other interesting forbidden structures such as the so-called strong simplices and clusters. The {\em nn-dimensional hypercube}, QnQ_n, is the graph whose vertex set is {0,1}n\{0,1\}^n and whose edge set consists of the vertex pairs differing in exactly one coordinate. The generalized Tur\'an problem asks for the maximum number of edges in a subgraph of a graph GG that does not contain a forbidden subgraph HH. We consider the Tur\'an problem where GG is QnQ_n and HH is a cycle of length 4k+24k+2 with k3k\geq 3. Confirming a conjecture of Erd{\H o}s (1984), we show that the ratio of the size of such a subgraph of QnQ_n over the number of edges of QnQ_n is o(1)o(1), i.e. in the limit this ratio approaches 0 as nn approaches infinity

    On vertex coloring without monochromatic triangles

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    We study a certain relaxation of the classic vertex coloring problem, namely, a coloring of vertices of undirected, simple graphs, such that there are no monochromatic triangles. We give the first classification of the problem in terms of classic and parametrized algorithms. Several computational complexity results are also presented, which improve on the previous results found in the literature. We propose the new structural parameter for undirected, simple graphs -- the triangle-free chromatic number χ3\chi_3. We bound χ3\chi_3 by other known structural parameters. We also present two classes of graphs with interesting coloring properties, that play pivotal role in proving useful observation about our problem. We give/ask several conjectures/questions throughout this paper to encourage new research in the area of graph coloring.Comment: Extended abstrac
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