Coloring and Recognizing Directed Interval Graphs
Abstract
A \emph{mixed interval graph} is an interval graph that has, for every pair of intersecting intervals, either an arc (directed arbitrarily) or an (undirected) edge. We are particularly interested in scenarios where edges and arcs are defined by the geometry of intervals. In a proper coloring of a mixed interval graph , an interval receives a lower (different) color than an interval if contains arc (edge ). Coloring of mixed graphs has applications, for example, in scheduling with precedence constraints; see a survey by Sotskov [Mathematics, 2020]. For coloring general mixed interval graphs, we present a -approximation algorithm, where is the size of a largest clique and is the length of a longest directed path in . For the subclass of \emph{bidirectional interval graphs} (introduced recently for an application in graph drawing), we show that optimal coloring is NP-hard. This was known for general mixed interval graphs. We introduce a new natural class of mixed interval graphs, which we call \emph{containment interval graphs}. In such a graph, there is an arc if interval contains interval , and there is an edge if and overlap. We show that these graphs can be recognized in polynomial time, that coloring them with the minimum number of colors is NP-hard, and that there is a 2-approximation algorithm for coloring.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2303.07960,
title = {Coloring and Recognizing Directed Interval Graphs},
author = {Grzegorz Gutowski and Konstanty Junosza-Szaniawski and Felix Klesen and Paweł Rzążewski and Alexander Wolff and Johannes Zink},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2303.07960},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
To appear in Proc. ISAAC 2023