Abstract

The coloring game is played by Alice and Bob on a finite graph G. They take turns properly coloring the vertices with t colors. The goal of Alice is to color the input graph with t colors, and Bob does his best to prevent it. If at any point there exists an uncolored vertex without available color, then Bob wins; otherwise Alice wins. The game chromatic number χg(G) of G is the smallest number t such that Alice has a winning strategy. In 1991, Bodlaender showed the smallest tree T with χg(T) equal to 4, and in 1993 Faigle et al. proved that every tree T satisfies the upper bound χg(T)≤4. The stars T = K1,p with p ≥ 1 are the only trees satisfying χg(T) = 2; and the paths T = Pn, n ≥ 4, satisfy χg(T) = 3. Despite the vast literature in this area, there does not exist a characterization of trees with χg(T) = 3 or 4. We answer a question about the required degree to ensure χg(T) = 4, by exhibiting infinitely many trees with maximum degree 3 and game chromatic number 4.

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