Abstract

An adjacent vertex-distinguishing edge coloring of a graph is a proper edge coloring such that no pair of adjacent vertices meets the same set of colors. The adjacent vertex-distinguishing edge chromatic number is the minimum number of colors required for an adjacent vertex-distinguishing edge coloring, denoted as $$\chi '_{as}(G)$$ . In this paper, we prove that for a connected graph G with maximum degree $$\Delta \ge 3$$ , $$\chi '_{as}(G)\le 3\Delta -1$$ , which proves the previous upper bound. We also prove that for a graph G with maximum degree $$\Delta \ge 458$$ and minimum degree $$\delta \ge 8\sqrt{\Delta ln \Delta }$$ , $$\chi '_{as}(G)\le \Delta +1+5\sqrt{\Delta ln \Delta }$$ .

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