Skip to main content

Worksheet 6.2.1 Worksheet

Guiding Questions.

Today, we’ll seek to answer the questions:
  • What is the chromatic number of a graph?
  • How many colors are required to color a planar graph?

Subsection 6.2.1.1 Vertex Coloring

In this section, we consider the problem of coloring a graph. We begin with an exploration.
Problem 6.2.1.
In your work as a cartographer, you’ve made many maps. In order to make your maps comprehensible, you prefer to give adjacent states different colors. How many colors are required to color the map in Figure 6.2.2 so that adjacent states are colored differently?
Figure 6.2.2. A hypothetical map (source
 1 
discrete.openmathbooks.org/dmoi3/sec_coloring.html
).
One of the interesting problems in graph theory is the problem of vertex coloring. In a proper vertex coloring, each vertex is assigned a color so that adjacent vertices are given different colors. We make this precise using the notion of function in Definition 6.2.3.
Definition 6.2.3.
Let \(G = (V,E)\) be a graph, \(V = \set{v_1, v_2, \ldots, v_n}\text{,}\) and \(C = \set{c_1, c_2, \ldots, c_k}\) a set of labels called colors. A proper vertex coloring is a function \(c : V\to C\) such that if \(\set{v_i, v_j}\in E\text{,}\) \(c(v_i)\ne c(v_j)\text{.}\)
The chromatic number of \(G\text{,}\) denoted \(\chi(G)\text{,}\) is the cardinality of the smallest set of colors \(C\) for which there is a proper coloring for the vertices of \(G\text{.}\)
LaTeX Code 6.2.4.
To typset \(\chi(G)\) in \(\LaTeX\text{,}\) use the command \chi(G) in math mode.
Activity 6.2.6.
Calculate the chromatic numbers of the graphs below. Be ready to justify your answers.
Figure 6.2.7. A graph.
Figure 6.2.8. A graph.
Figure 6.2.9. A graph.
Let’s explore some properties of vertex coloring.
For Theorem 6.2.11, recall the definition of the clique number of a graph.
Problem 6.2.12.
Provide examples that demonstrate that the bounds on \(\chi(G)\) from Theorem 6.2.10 and Theorem 6.2.11 cannot be improved in general.
Problem 6.2.13.
Provide examples of graphs \(G_1\) and \(G_2\) that demonstrate that we may have \(\chi(G_1) \lt n\) and that \(\chi(G_2) \gt \omega(G_2)\text{.}\)