787 research outputs found

    Large rainbow matchings in large graphs

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    A \textit{rainbow subgraph} of an edge-colored graph is a subgraph whose edges have distinct colors. The \textit{color degree} of a vertex vv is the number of different colors on edges incident to vv. We show that if nn is large enough (namely, n≥4.25k2n\geq 4.25k^2), then each nn-vertex graph GG with minimum color degree at least kk contains a rainbow matching of size at least kk

    Harmonious Coloring of Trees with Large Maximum Degree

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    A harmonious coloring of GG is a proper vertex coloring of GG such that every pair of colors appears on at most one pair of adjacent vertices. The harmonious chromatic number of GG, h(G)h(G), is the minimum number of colors needed for a harmonious coloring of GG. We show that if TT is a forest of order nn with maximum degree Δ(T)≥n+23\Delta(T)\geq \frac{n+2}{3}, then h(T)= \Delta(T)+2, & if $T$ has non-adjacent vertices of degree $\Delta(T)$; \Delta(T)+1, & otherwise. Moreover, the proof yields a polynomial-time algorithm for an optimal harmonious coloring of such a forest.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur

    Planar Induced Subgraphs of Sparse Graphs

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    We show that every graph has an induced pseudoforest of at least n−m/4.5n-m/4.5 vertices, an induced partial 2-tree of at least n−m/5n-m/5 vertices, and an induced planar subgraph of at least n−m/5.2174n-m/5.2174 vertices. These results are constructive, implying linear-time algorithms to find the respective induced subgraphs. We also show that the size of the largest KhK_h-minor-free graph in a given graph can sometimes be at most n−m/6+o(m)n-m/6+o(m).Comment: Accepted by Graph Drawing 2014. To appear in Journal of Graph Algorithms and Application
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