English

The Maximum k-Differential Coloring Problem

Discrete Mathematics 2014-10-03 v2

Abstract

Given an nn-vertex graph GG and two positive integers d,kNd,k \in \mathbb{N}, the (d,knd,kn)-differential coloring problem asks for a coloring of the vertices of GG (if one exists) with distinct numbers from 1 to knkn (treated as \emph{colors}), such that the minimum difference between the two colors of any adjacent vertices is at least dd. While it was known that the problem of determining whether a general graph is (2,n2,n)-differential colorable is NP-complete, our main contribution is a complete characterization of bipartite, planar and outerplanar graphs that admit (2,kn2,kn)-differential colorings. For practical reasons, we consider also color ranges larger than nn, i.e., k>1k > 1. We show that it is NP-complete to determine whether a graph admits a (3,2n3,2n)-differential coloring. The same negative result holds for the (2n/3,2n\lfloor 2n/3 \rfloor, 2n-differential coloring problem, even in the case where the input graph is planar.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1409.8133,
  title  = {The Maximum k-Differential Coloring Problem},
  author = {Michael Bekos and Stephen Kobourov and Michael Kaufmann and Sankar Veeramoni},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1409.8133},
  year   = {2014}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T06:08:19.743Z