English

Linear Coloring and Linear Graphs

Discrete Mathematics 2008-07-29 v1 Data Structures and Algorithms

Abstract

Motivated by the definition of linear coloring on simplicial complexes, recently introduced in the context of algebraic topology \cite{Civan}, and the framework through which it was studied, we introduce the linear coloring on graphs. We provide an upper bound for the chromatic number χ(G)\chi(G), for any graph GG, and show that GG can be linearly colored in polynomial time by proposing a simple linear coloring algorithm. Based on these results, we define a new class of perfect graphs, which we call co-linear graphs, and study their complement graphs, namely linear graphs. The linear coloring of a graph GG is a vertex coloring such that two vertices can be assigned the same color, if their corresponding clique sets are associated by the set inclusion relation (a clique set of a vertex uu is the set of all maximal cliques containing uu); the linear chromatic number λ(G)\mathcal{\lambda}(G) of GG is the least integer kk for which GG admits a linear coloring with kk colors. We show that linear graphs are those graphs GG for which the linear chromatic number achieves its theoretical lower bound in every induced subgraph of GG. We prove inclusion relations between these two classes of graphs and other subclasses of chordal and co-chordal graphs, and also study the structure of the forbidden induced subgraphs of the class of linear graphs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0807.4234,
  title  = {Linear Coloring and Linear Graphs},
  author = {Kyriaki Ioannidou and Stavros D. Nikolopoulos},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0807.4234},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

21 pages, 7 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:04:37.377Z