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Colouring normal quadrangulations of projective spaces (2503.23057v1)

Published 29 Mar 2025 in math.CO

Abstract: Youngs proved that every non-bipartite quadrangulation of the projective plane $\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}2$ is 4-chromatic. Kaiser and Stehl\'{\i}k [J. Combin. Theory Ser. B 113 (2015), 1-17] generalised the notion of a quadrangulation to higher dimensions and extended Youngs' theorem by proving that every non-bipartite quadrangulation of the $d$-dimensional projective space $\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}d$ with $d \geq 2$ has chromatic number at least $d+2$. On the other hand, Hachimori et al. [European. J. Combin. 125 (2025), 104089] defined another kind of high-dimensional quadrangulation, called a normal quadrangulation. They proved that if a non-bipartite normal quadrangulation $G$ of $\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}d$ with any $d \geq 2$ satisfies a certain geometric condition, then $G$ is $4$-chromatic, and asked whether the geometric condition can be removed from the result. In this paper, we give a negative solution to their problem for the case $d=3$, proving that there exist 3-dimensional normal quadrangulations of $\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}3$ whose chromatic number is arbitrarily large. Moreover, we prove that no normal quadrangulation of $\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}d$ with any $d \geq 2$ has chromatic number $3$.

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