The imperfection ratio is a graph invariant which indicates how good a lower bound the weighted clique number gives on the weighted chromatic number, in the limit as weights get large. Its introduction was motivated by investigations of the radio channel assignment problem, where one has to assign c
Graph Imperfection
β Scribed by Stefanie Gerke; Colin McDiarmid
- Book ID
- 102584433
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 255 KB
- Volume
- 83
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0095-8956
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We are interested in colouring a graph G=(V, E) together with an integral weight or demand vector x=(x v : v # V) in such a way that x v colours are assigned to each node v, adjacent nodes are coloured with disjoint sets of colours, and we use as few colours as possible. Such problems arise in the design of cellular communication systems, when radio channels must be assigned to transmitters to satisfy demand and avoid interference.
We are particularly interested in the ratio of chromatic number to clique number when some weights are large. We introduce a relevant new graph invariant, the ``imperfection ratio'' imp(G) of a graph G, present alternative equivalent descriptions, and show some basic properties. For example, imp(G)=1 if and only if G is perfect, imp(G)=imp(G ) where G denotes the complement of G, and imp(G)= gΓ(g&1) for any line graph G where g is the minimum length of an odd hole (assuming there is an odd hole).
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The family of all critically strongly-imperfect graphs decomposes in two nonempty classes: perfect and imperfect ones. In this paper we characterize the critically strongly-imperfect graphs which are, simultaneously, imperfect. We prove that these are precisely the holes of odd length ~> 5 or their