
arXiv: 1505.06234
AbstractFor a graph G and a tree‐decomposition of G, the chromatic number of is the maximum of , taken over all bags . The tree‐chromatic number of G is the minimum chromatic number of all tree‐decompositions of G. The path‐chromatic number of G is defined analogously. In this article, we introduce an operation that always increases the path‐chromatic number of a graph. As an easy corollary of our construction, we obtain an infinite family of graphs whose path‐chromatic number and tree‐chromatic number are different. This settles a question of Seymour (J Combin Theory Ser B 116 (2016), 229–237). Our results also imply that the path‐chromatic numbers of the Mycielski graphs are unbounded.
Géométrie, Mycielski graphs, chromatic number; Mycielski graphs; path-decompositions; tree-decompositions, Coloring of graphs and hypergraphs, Edge subsets with special properties (factorization, matching, partitioning, covering and packing, etc.), tree-decompositions, chromatic number, FOS: Mathematics, Mathematics - Combinatorics, Combinatorics (math.CO), path-decompositions
Géométrie, Mycielski graphs, chromatic number; Mycielski graphs; path-decompositions; tree-decompositions, Coloring of graphs and hypergraphs, Edge subsets with special properties (factorization, matching, partitioning, covering and packing, etc.), tree-decompositions, chromatic number, FOS: Mathematics, Mathematics - Combinatorics, Combinatorics (math.CO), path-decompositions
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