1. Upper bounding rainbow connection number by forest number.
- Author
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Sunil Chandran, L., Issac, Davis, Lauri, Juho, and van Leeuwen, Erik Jan
- Subjects
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RAINBOWS , *SPANNING trees , *CHARTS, diagrams, etc. , *GRAPH coloring - Abstract
A path in an edge-colored graph is rainbow if no two edges of it are colored the same, and the graph is rainbow-connected if there is a rainbow path between each pair of its vertices. The minimum number of colors needed to rainbow-connect a graph G is the rainbow connection number of G , denoted by rc (G). A simple way to rainbow-connect a graph G is to color the edges of a spanning tree with distinct colors and then re-use any of these colors to color the remaining edges of G. This proves that rc (G) ≤ | V (G) | − 1. We ask whether there is a stronger connection between tree-like structures and rainbow coloring than that is implied by the above trivial argument. For instance, is it possible to find an upper bound of t (G) − 1 for rc (G) , where t (G) is the number of vertices in the largest induced tree of G ? The answer turns out to be negative, as there are counter-examples that show that even c ⋅ t (G) is not an upper bound for rc (G) for any given constant c. In this work we show that if we consider the forest number f (G) , the number of vertices in a maximum induced forest of G , instead of t (G) , then surprisingly we do get an upper bound. More specifically, we prove that rc (G) ≤ f (G) + 2. Our result indicates a stronger connection between rainbow connection and tree-like structures than that was suggested by the simple spanning tree based upper bound. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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