319 research outputs found

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

    Get PDF
    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

    Steinitz Theorems for Orthogonal Polyhedra

    Full text link
    We define a simple orthogonal polyhedron to be a three-dimensional polyhedron with the topology of a sphere in which three mutually-perpendicular edges meet at each vertex. By analogy to Steinitz's theorem characterizing the graphs of convex polyhedra, we find graph-theoretic characterizations of three classes of simple orthogonal polyhedra: corner polyhedra, which can be drawn by isometric projection in the plane with only one hidden vertex, xyz polyhedra, in which each axis-parallel line through a vertex contains exactly one other vertex, and arbitrary simple orthogonal polyhedra. In particular, the graphs of xyz polyhedra are exactly the bipartite cubic polyhedral graphs, and every bipartite cubic polyhedral graph with a 4-connected dual graph is the graph of a corner polyhedron. Based on our characterizations we find efficient algorithms for constructing orthogonal polyhedra from their graphs.Comment: 48 pages, 31 figure

    K3K_3-WORM colorings of graphs: Lower chromatic number and gaps in the chromatic spectrum

    Get PDF
    A K3K_3-WORM coloring of a graph GG is an assignment of colors to the vertices in such a way that the vertices of each K3K_3-subgraph of GG get precisely two colors. We study graphs GG 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 K3K_3-WORM coloring with two colors. In fact for every integer k≥3k\ge 3 there exists a K3K_3-WORM colorable graph in which the minimum number of colors is exactly kk. There also exist K3K_3-WORM colorable graphs which have a K3K_3-WORM coloring with two colors and also with kk colors but no coloring with any of 3,…,k−13,\dots,k-1 colors. We also prove that it is NP-hard to determine the minimum number of colors and NP-complete to decide kk-colorability for every k≥2k \ge 2 (and remains intractable even for graphs of maximum degree 9 if k=3k=3). On the other hand, we prove positive results for dd-degenerate graphs with small dd, 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
    • …
    corecore