Abstract

Let G be a graph with chromatic number χ (G). A vertex colouring of G is \emphacyclic if each bichromatic subgraph is a forest. A \emphstar colouring of G is an acyclic colouring in which each bichromatic subgraph is a star forest. Let χ _a(G) and χ _s(G) denote the acyclic and star chromatic numbers of G. This paper investigates acyclic and star colourings of subdivisions. Let G' be the graph obtained from G by subdividing each edge once. We prove that acyclic (respectively, star) colourings of G' correspond to vertex partitions of G in which each subgraph has small arboricity (chromatic index). It follows that χ _a(G'), χ _s(G') and χ (G) are tied, in the sense that each is bounded by a function of the other. Moreover the binding functions that we establish are all tight. The \emphoriented chromatic number χ ^→(G) of an (undirected) graph G is the maximum, taken over all orientations D of G, of the minimum number of colours in a vertex colouring of D such that between any two colour classes, all edges have the same direction. We prove that χ ^→(G')=χ (G) whenever χ (G)≥ 9.

Highlights

  • Let G be a graph with vertex set V (G) and edge set E(G)

  • An acyclic colouring is a star colouring if every 4-vertex path receives at least three colours; that is, every bichromatic subgraph is a union of disjoint stars

  • The star / acyclic / oriented chromatic numbers of G′ are the main topics of this paper

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Summary

Introduction

Let G be a (finite, simple, undirected) graph with vertex set V (G) and edge set E(G). The chromatic number χ(G) is the minimum k such that G has a vertex k-colouring. The chromatic index χ′(G) is the minimum k such that G has an edge k-colouring. An acyclic colouring is a star colouring if every 4-vertex path receives at least three colours; that is, every bichromatic subgraph is a union of disjoint stars. The star chromatic number χs(G) is the minimum number of colours in a star colouring of G. The subdivision of G obtained by replacing each edge vw by a 3-vertex path (v, x, w) is denoted by G′.

Results
Partitionable Parameters
Large Subdivisions

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