Hajós construction

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Short description: Graph operation

In graph theory, a branch of mathematics, the Hajós construction is an operation on graphs named after György Hajós (1961) that may be used to construct any critical graph or any graph whose chromatic number is at least some given threshold.

The construction

Applying the Hajós construction to two copies of K4 by identifying a vertex from each copy into a single vertex (shown with both colors), deleting an edge incident to the combined vertex within each subgraph (dashed) and adding a new edge connecting the endpoints of the deleted edges (thick green), produces the Moser spindle.

Let G and H be two undirected graphs, vw be an edge of G, and xy be an edge of H. Then the Hajós construction forms a new graph that combines the two graphs by identifying vertices v and x into a single vertex, removing the two edges vw and xy, and adding a new edge wy.

For example, let G and H each be a complete graph K4 on four vertices; because of the symmetry of these graphs, the choice of which edge to select from each of them is unimportant. In this case, the result of applying the Hajós construction is the Moser spindle, a seven-vertex unit distance graph that requires four colors.

As another example, if G and H are cycle graphs of length p and q respectively, then the result of applying the Hajós construction is itself a cycle graph, of length p + q − 1.

Constructible graphs

A graph G is said to be k-constructible (or Hajós-k-constructible) when it formed in one of the following three ways:[1]

  • The complete graph Kk is k-constructible.
  • Let G and H be any two k-constructible graphs. Then the graph formed by applying the Hajós construction to G and H is k-constructible.
  • Let G be any k-constructible graph, and let u and v be any two non-adjacent vertices in G. Then the graph formed by combining u and v into a single vertex is also k-constructible. Equivalently, this graph may be formed by adding edge uv to the graph and then contracting it.

Connection to coloring

It is straightforward to verify that every k-constructible graph requires at least k colors in any proper graph coloring. Indeed, this is clear for the complete graph Kk, and the effect of identifying two nonadjacent vertices is to force them to have the same color as each other in any coloring, something that does not reduce the number of colors. In the Hajós construction itself, the new edge wy forces at least one of the two vertices w and y to have a different color than the combined vertex for v and x, so any proper coloring of the combined graph leads to a proper coloring of one of the two smaller graphs from which it was formed, which again causes it to require k colors.[1]

Hajós proved more strongly that a graph requires at least k colors, in any proper coloring, if and only if it contains a k-constructible graph as a subgraph. Equivalently, every k-critical graph (a graph that requires k colors but for which every proper subgraph requires fewer colors) is k-constructible.[2] Alternatively, every graph that requires k colors may be formed by combining the Hajós construction, the operation of identifying any two nonadjacent vertices, and the operations of adding a vertex or edge to the given graph, starting from the complete graph Kk.[3]

A similar construction may be used for list coloring in place of coloring.[4]

Constructibility of critical graphs

For k = 3, every k-critical graph (that is, every odd cycle) can be generated as a k-constructible graph such that all of the graphs formed in its construction are also k-critical. For k = 8, this is not true: a graph found by (Catlin 1979) as a counterexample to Hajós's conjecture that k-chromatic graphs contain a subdivision of Kk, also serves as a counterexample to this problem. Subsequently, k-critical but not k-constructible graphs solely through k-critical graphs were found for all k ≥ 4. For k = 4, one such example is the graph obtained from the dodecahedron graph by adding a new edge between each pair of antipodal vertices[5]

The Hajós number

Because merging two non-adjacent vertices reduces the number of vertices in the resulting graph, the number of operations needed to represent a given graph G using the operations defined by Hajós may exceed the number of vertices in G.[6]

More specifically, (Mansfield Welsh) define the Hajós number h(G) of a k-chromatic graph G to be the minimum number of steps needed to construct G from Kk, where each step forms a new graph by combining two previously formed graphs, merging two nonadjacent vertices of a previously formed graph, or adding a vertex or edge to a previously formed graph. They showed that, for an n-vertex graph G with m edges, h(G) ≤ 2n2/3 − m + 1 − 1. If every graph has a polynomial Hajós number, this would imply that it is possible to prove non-colorability in nondeterministic polynomial time, and therefore imply that NP = co-NP, a conclusion considered unlikely by complexity theorists.[7] However, it is not known how to prove non-polynomial lower bounds on the Hajós number without making some complexity-theoretic assumption, and if such a bound could be proven it would also imply the existence of non-polynomial bounds on certain types of Frege system in mathematical logic.[7]

The minimum size of an expression tree describing a Hajós construction for a given graph G may be significantly larger than the Hajós number of G, because a shortest expression for G may re-use the same graphs multiple times, an economy not permitted in an expression tree. There exist 3-chromatic graphs for which the smallest such expression tree has exponential size.[8]

Other applications

(Koester 1991) used the Hajós construction to generate an infinite set of 4-critical polyhedral graphs, each having more than twice as many edges as vertices. Similarly, (Liu Zhang) used the construction, starting with the Grötzsch graph, to generate many 4-critical triangle-free graphs, which they showed to be difficult to color using traditional backtracking algorithms.

In polyhedral combinatorics, (Euler 2003) used the Hajós construction to generate facets of the stable set polytope.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 (Diestel 2006).
  2. A proof can also be found in (Diestel 2006).
  3. (Jensen Toft), p. 184.
  4. (Gravier 1996); (Kubale 2004).
  5. (Jensen Royle).
  6. (Diestel 2006) alludes to this when he writes that the sequence of operations is "not always short". (Jensen Toft), 11.6 Length of Hajós proofs, pp. 184–185, state as an open problem the question of determining the smallest number of steps needed to construct every n-vertex graph.
  7. 7.0 7.1 (Pitassi Urquhart).
  8. (Iwama Pitassi).

References