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Towards the linear arboricity conjecture (1809.04716v1)

Published 13 Sep 2018 in math.CO and cs.DM

Abstract: The linear arboricity of a graph $G$, denoted by $\text{la}(G)$, is the minimum number of edge-disjoint linear forests (i.e. forests in which every connected component is a path) in $G$ whose union covers all the edges of $G$. A famous conjecture due to Akiyama, Exoo, and Harary from 1980 asserts that $\text{la}(G)\leq \lceil (\Delta(G)+1)/2 \rceil$, where $\Delta(G)$ denotes the maximum degree of $G$. This conjectured upper bound would be best possible, as is easily seen by taking $G$ to be a regular graph. In this paper, we show that for every graph $G$, $\text{la}(G)\leq \frac{\Delta}{2}+O(\Delta{2/3-\alpha})$ for some $\alpha > 0$, thereby improving the previously best known bound due to Alon and Spencer from 1992. For graphs which are sufficiently good spectral expanders, we give even better bounds. Our proofs of these results further give probabilistic polynomial time algorithms for finding such decompositions into linear forests.

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