Nonrepetitive choice number of trees (1207.5155v1)
Abstract: A nonrepetitive coloring of a path is a coloring of its vertices such that the sequence of colors along the path does not contain two identical, consecutive blocks. The remarkable construction of Thue asserts that 3 colors are enough to color nonrepetitively paths of any length. A nonrepetitive coloring of a graph is a coloring of its vertices such that all simple paths are nonrepetitively colored. Assume that each vertex $v$ of a graph $G$ has assigned a set (list) of colors $L_v$. A coloring is chosen from ${L_v}_{v\in V(G)}$ if the color of each $v$ belongs to $L_v$. The Thue choice number of $G$, denoted by $\pi_l(G)$, is the minimum $k$ such that for any list assignment $\set{L_v}$ of $G$ with each $|L_v|\geq k$ there is a nonrepetitive coloring of $G$ chosen from ${L_v}$. Alon et al. (2002) proved that $\pi_l(G)=O(\Delta2)$ for every graph $G$ with maximum degree at most $\Delta$. We propose an almost linear bound in $\Delta$ for trees, namely for any $\epsi>0$ there is a constant $c$ such that $\pi_l(T)\leq c\Delta{1+\epsi}$ for every tree $T$ with maximum degree $\Delta$. The only lower bound for trees is given by a recent result of Fiorenzi et al. (2011) that for any $\Delta$ there is a tree $T$ such that $\pi_l(T)=\Omega(\frac{\log\Delta}{\log\log\Delta})$. We also show that if one allows repetitions in a coloring but still forbid 3 identical consecutive blocks of colors on any simple path, then a constant size of the lists allows to color any tree.
- Jakub Kozik (22 papers)
- Piotr Micek (64 papers)