Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4949879 | Discrete Applied Mathematics | 2017 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
In this paper we study threshold-coloring of graphs, where the vertex colors represented by integers are used to describe any spanning subgraph of the given graph as follows. A pair of vertices with a small difference in their colors implies that the edge between them is present, while a pair of vertices with a big color difference implies that the edge is absent. Not all planar graphs are threshold-colorable, but several subclasses, such as trees, some planar grids, and planar graphs with no short cycles can always be threshold-colored. Using these results we obtain unit-cube contact representation of several subclasses of planar graphs. Variants of the threshold-coloring problem are related to well-known graph coloring and other graph-theoretic problems. Using these relations we show the NP-completeness for two of these variants, and describe a polynomial-time algorithm for another.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computational Theory and Mathematics
Authors
Md. Jawaherul Alam, Steven Chaplick, Gašper Fijavž, Michael Kaufmann, Stephen G. Kobourov, Sergey Pupyrev, Jackson Toeniskoetter,