Hans Becker, Frank Schmidt, et al.
Photomask and Next-Generation Lithography Mask Technology 2004
A vertex coloring of a graph G is called acyclic if no two adjacent vertices have the same color and there is no two‐colored cycle in G. The acyclic chromatic number of G, denoted by A(G), is the least number of colors in an acyclic coloring of G. We show that if G has maximum degree d, then A(G) = 0(d4/3) as d → ∞. This settles a problem of Erdös who conjectured, in 1976, that A(G) = o(d2) as d → ∞. We also show that there are graphs G with maximum degree d for which A(G) = Ω(d4/3/(log d)1/3); and that the edges of any graph with maximum degree d can be colored by 0(d) colors so that no two adjacent edges have the same color and there is no two‐colored cycle. All the proofs rely heavily on probabilistic arguments. Copyright © 1991 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., A Wiley Company
Hans Becker, Frank Schmidt, et al.
Photomask and Next-Generation Lithography Mask Technology 2004
George Markowsky
J. Math. Anal. Appl.
Zhihua Xiong, Yixin Xu, et al.
International Journal of Modelling, Identification and Control
Nimrod Megiddo
Journal of Symbolic Computation