Abstract

We study the list chromatic number of Cartesian products of graphs through the Alon-Tarsi number as defined by Jensen and Toft (1995) in their seminal book on graph coloring problems. The Alon-Tarsi number of $G$, $AT(G)$, is the smallest $k$ for which there is an orientation, $D$, of $G$ with max indegree $k\!-\!1$ such that the number of even and odd circulations contained in $D$ are different. It is known that $\chi(G) \leq \chi_\ell(G) \leq \chi_p(G) \leq AT(G)$, where  $\chi(G)$ is the chromatic number, $\chi_\ell(G)$ is the list chromatic number, and $\chi_p(G)$ is the paint number of $G$. In this paper we find families of graphs $G$ and $H$ such that $\chi(G \square H) = AT(G \square H)$, reducing this sequence of inequalities to equality.
 We show that the Alon-Tarsi number of the Cartesian product of an odd cycle and a path is always equal to 3. This result is then extended to show that if $G$ is an odd cycle or a complete graph and $H$ is a graph on at least two vertices containing the Hamilton path $w_1, w_2, \ldots, w_n$ such that for each $i$, $w_i$ has a most $k$ neighbors among $w_1, w_2, \ldots, w_{i-1}$, then $AT(G \square H) \leq \Delta(G)+k$ where $\Delta(G)$ is the maximum degree of $G$.  We discuss other extensions for $G \square H$, where $G$ is such that $V(G)$ can be partitioned into odd cycles and complete graphs, and $H$ is a graph containing a Hamiltonian path. We apply these bounds to get chromatic-choosable Cartesian products, in fact we show that these families of graphs have $\chi(G) = AT(G)$, improving previously known bounds.

Highlights

  • In this paper all graphs are finite, and all graphs are either simple graphs or simple directed graphs

  • In the classic vertex coloring problem we wish to color the vertices of a graph G with as few colors as possible so that adjacent vertices receive different colors, a so-called proper coloring

  • The most well known conjecture along these lines is the List Coloring Conjecture which states that every line graph of a loopless multigraph is chromatic-choosable

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Summary

Introduction

In this paper all graphs are finite, and all graphs are either simple graphs or simple directed graphs. Taylor, and Rubin observed in [6] that bipartite graphs can have arbitrarily large list chromatic number. This means that the gap between χ(G) and χ (G) can be arbitrarily large, and we can not hope to find an upper bound for χ (G) in terms of just χ(G). The most well known conjecture along these lines is the List Coloring Conjecture (see [9]) which states that every line graph of a loopless multigraph is chromatic-choosable. In the two subsections, we discuss the known bounds for the list chromatic number of the Cartesian product of graphs as well as the main tool we use to obtain our results: the Alon-Tarsi Theorem.

Cartesian Product of Graphs
Alon-Tarsi Number
Applying the Alon-Tarsi Theorem
Some Examples
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