Critical graph

Undirected graph
On the left-top a vertex critical graph with chromatic number 6; next all the N-1 subgraphs with chromatic number 5.

In graph theory, a critical graph is an undirected graph all of whose proper subgraphs have smaller chromatic number. In such a graph, every vertex or edge is a critical element, in the sense that its deletion would decrease the number of colors needed in a graph coloring of the given graph. The decrease in the number of colors cannot be by more than one.

Variations

A k {\displaystyle k} -critical graph is a critical graph with chromatic number k {\displaystyle k} . A graph G {\displaystyle G} with chromatic number k {\displaystyle k} is k {\displaystyle k} -vertex-critical if each of its vertices is a critical element. Critical graphs are the minimal members in terms of chromatic number, which is a very important measure in graph theory.

Some properties of a k {\displaystyle k} -critical graph G {\displaystyle G} with n {\displaystyle n} vertices and m {\displaystyle m} edges:

  • G {\displaystyle G} has only one component.
  • G {\displaystyle G} is finite (this is the de Bruijn–Erdős theorem).[1]
  • The minimum degree δ ( G ) {\displaystyle \delta (G)} obeys the inequality δ ( G ) k 1 {\displaystyle \delta (G)\geq k-1} . That is, every vertex is adjacent to at least k 1 {\displaystyle k-1} others. More strongly, G {\displaystyle G} is ( k 1 ) {\displaystyle (k-1)} -edge-connected.[2]
  • If G {\displaystyle G} is a regular graph with degree k 1 {\displaystyle k-1} , meaning every vertex is adjacent to exactly k 1 {\displaystyle k-1} others, then G {\displaystyle G} is either the complete graph K k {\displaystyle K_{k}} with n = k {\displaystyle n=k} vertices, or an odd-length cycle graph. This is Brooks' theorem.[3]
  • 2 m ( k 1 ) n + k 3 {\displaystyle 2m\geq (k-1)n+k-3} .[4]
  • 2 m ( k 1 ) n + ( k 3 ) / ( k 2 3 ) n {\displaystyle 2m\geq (k-1)n+\lfloor (k-3)/(k^{2}-3)\rfloor n} .[5]
  • Either G {\displaystyle G} may be decomposed into two smaller critical graphs, with an edge between every pair of vertices that includes one vertex from each of the two subgraphs, or G {\displaystyle G} has at least 2 k 1 {\displaystyle 2k-1} vertices.[6] More strongly, either G {\displaystyle G} has a decomposition of this type, or for every vertex v {\displaystyle v} of G {\displaystyle G} there is a k {\displaystyle k} -coloring in which v {\displaystyle v} is the only vertex of its color and every other color class has at least two vertices.[7]

Graph G {\displaystyle G} is vertex-critical if and only if for every vertex v {\displaystyle v} , there is an optimal proper coloring in which v {\displaystyle v} is a singleton color class.

As Hajós (1961) showed, every k {\displaystyle k} -critical graph may be formed from a complete graph K k {\displaystyle K_{k}} by combining the Hajós construction with an operation that identifies two non-adjacent vertices. The graphs formed in this way always require k {\displaystyle k} colors in any proper coloring.[8]

A double-critical graph is a connected graph in which the deletion of any pair of adjacent vertices decreases the chromatic number by two. It is an open problem to determine whether K k {\displaystyle K_{k}} is the only double-critical k {\displaystyle k} -chromatic graph.[9]

See also

  • Factor-critical graph

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Critical graph.
  1. ^ de Bruijn, N. G.; Erdős, P. (1951), "A colour problem for infinite graphs and a problem in the theory of relations", Nederl. Akad. Wetensch. Proc. Ser. A, 54: 371–373, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.210.6623, doi:10.1016/S1385-7258(51)50053-7. (Indag. Math. 13.)
  2. ^ Lovász, László (1992), "Solution to Exercise 9.21", Combinatorial Problems and Exercises (2nd ed.), North-Holland, ISBN 978-0-8218-6947-5
  3. ^ Brooks, R. L. (1941), "On colouring the nodes of a network", Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 37 (2): 194–197, Bibcode:1941PCPS...37..194B, doi:10.1017/S030500410002168X, S2CID 209835194
  4. ^ Dirac, G. A. (1957), "A theorem of R. L. Brooks and a conjecture of H. Hadwiger", Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, 7 (1): 161–195, doi:10.1112/plms/s3-7.1.161
  5. ^ Gallai, T. (1963), "Kritische Graphen I", Publ. Math. Inst. Hungar. Acad. Sci., 8: 165–192
  6. ^ Gallai, T. (1963), "Kritische Graphen II", Publ. Math. Inst. Hungar. Acad. Sci., 8: 373–395
  7. ^ Stehlík, Matěj (2003), "Critical graphs with connected complements", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 89 (2): 189–194, doi:10.1016/S0095-8956(03)00069-8, MR 2017723
  8. ^ Hajós, G. (1961), "Über eine Konstruktion nicht n-färbbarer Graphen", Wiss. Z. Martin-Luther-Univ. Halle-Wittenberg Math.-Natur. Reihe, 10: 116–117
  9. ^ Erdős, Paul (1967), "Problem 2", In Theory of Graphs, Proc. Colloq., Tihany, p. 361

Further reading

  • Jensen, T. R.; Toft, B. (1995), Graph coloring problems, New York: Wiley-Interscience, ISBN 0-471-02865-7
  • Stiebitz, Michael; Tuza, Zsolt; Voigt, Margit (6 August 2009), "On list critical graphs", Discrete Mathematics, 309 (15), Elsevier: 4931–4941, doi:10.1016/j.disc.2008.05.021