Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4656977 | Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B | 2012 | 17 Pages |
We show that Grötzschʼs theorem extends to all higher surfaces in the sense that every triangle-free graph on a surface of Euler genus g becomes 3-colorable after deleting a set of at most 1000⋅g⋅f(g) vertices where f(g) is the smallest edge-width which guarantees a graph of Euler genus g and girth 5 to be 3-colorable.We derive this result from a general cutting technique which we also use to extend other results on planar graphs to higher surfaces in the same spirit, even after deleting only 1000g vertices. These include the 5-list-color theorem, results on arboricity, and various types of colorings, and decomposition theorems of planar graphs into two graphs with prescribed degeneracy properties.It is not known if the 4-color theorem extends in this way.