1,200 research outputs found
Two results on the digraph chromatic number
It is known (Bollob\'{a}s (1978); Kostochka and Mazurova (1977)) that there
exist graphs of maximum degree and of arbitrarily large girth whose
chromatic number is at least . We show an analogous
result for digraphs where the chromatic number of a digraph is defined as
the minimum integer so that can be partitioned into acyclic
sets, and the girth is the length of the shortest cycle in the corresponding
undirected graph. It is also shown, in the same vein as an old result of Erdos
(1962), that there are digraphs with arbitrarily large chromatic number where
every large subset of vertices is 2-colorable
Oriented coloring on recursively defined digraphs
Coloring is one of the most famous problems in graph theory. The coloring
problem on undirected graphs has been well studied, whereas there are very few
results for coloring problems on directed graphs. An oriented k-coloring of an
oriented graph G=(V,A) is a partition of the vertex set V into k independent
sets such that all the arcs linking two of these subsets have the same
direction. The oriented chromatic number of an oriented graph G is the smallest
k such that G allows an oriented k-coloring. Deciding whether an acyclic
digraph allows an oriented 4-coloring is NP-hard. It follows, that finding the
chromatic number of an oriented graph is an NP-hard problem. This motivates to
consider the problem on oriented co-graphs. After giving several
characterizations for this graph class, we show a linear time algorithm which
computes an optimal oriented coloring for an oriented co-graph. We further
prove how the oriented chromatic number can be computed for the disjoint union
and order composition from the oriented chromatic number of the involved
oriented co-graphs. It turns out that within oriented co-graphs the oriented
chromatic number is equal to the length of a longest oriented path plus one. We
also show that the graph isomorphism problem on oriented co-graphs can be
solved in linear time.Comment: 14 page
On the Complexity of Digraph Colourings and Vertex Arboricity
It has been shown by Bokal et al. that deciding 2-colourability of digraphs
is an NP-complete problem. This result was later on extended by Feder et al. to
prove that deciding whether a digraph has a circular -colouring is
NP-complete for all rational . In this paper, we consider the complexity
of corresponding decision problems for related notions of fractional colourings
for digraphs and graphs, including the star dichromatic number, the fractional
dichromatic number and the circular vertex arboricity. We prove the following
results:
Deciding if the star dichromatic number of a digraph is at most is
NP-complete for every rational .
Deciding if the fractional dichromatic number of a digraph is at most is
NP-complete for every .
Deciding if the circular vertex arboricity of a graph is at most is
NP-complete for every rational .
To show these results, different techniques are required in each case. In
order to prove the first result, we relate the star dichromatic number to a new
notion of homomorphisms between digraphs, called circular homomorphisms, which
might be of independent interest. We provide a classification of the
computational complexities of the corresponding homomorphism colouring problems
similar to the one derived by Feder et al. for acyclic homomorphisms.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
Complete Acyclic Colorings
We study two parameters that arise from the dichromatic number and the
vertex-arboricity in the same way that the achromatic number comes from the
chromatic number. The adichromatic number of a digraph is the largest number of
colors its vertices can be colored with such that every color induces an
acyclic subdigraph but merging any two colors yields a monochromatic directed
cycle. Similarly, the a-vertex arboricity of an undirected graph is the largest
number of colors that can be used such that every color induces a forest but
merging any two yields a monochromatic cycle. We study the relation between
these parameters and their behavior with respect to other classical parameters
such as degeneracy and most importantly feedback vertex sets.Comment: 17 pages, no figure
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