The strong perfect graph theorem
Combinatorics
2007-05-23 v1
Abstract
A graph G is perfect if for every induced subgraph H, the chromatic number of H equals the size of the largest complete subgraph of H, and G is Berge if no induced subgraph of G is an odd cycle of length at least 5 or the complement of one. The "strong perfect graph conjecture" (Berge, 1961) asserts that a graph is perfect if and only if it is Berge. A stronger conjecture was made recently by Conforti, Cornuejols and Vuskovic -- that every Berge graph either falls into one of a few basic classes, or it has a kind of separation that cannot occur in a minimal imperfect graph. In this paper we prove both these conjectures.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.math/0212070,
title = {The strong perfect graph theorem},
author = {Maria Chudnovsky and Neil Robertson and Paul Seymour and Robin Thomas},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:math/0212070},
year = {2007}
}
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150 pages