Χ-bounded explained
In graph theory, a
-bounded
family
of graphs is one for which there is some function
such that, for every integer
the graphs in
with
(clique number) can be colored with at most
colors. The function
is called a
-binding function
for
. These concepts and their notations were formulated by András Gyárfás. The use of the Greek letter chi in the term
-bounded is based on the fact that the chromatic number of a graph
is commonly denoted
. An overview of the area can be found in a survey of Alex Scott and Paul Seymour.Nontriviality
It is not true that the family of all graphs is
-bounded.As, and showed, there exist
triangle-free graphs of arbitrarily large chromatic number, so for these graphs it is not possible to define a finite value of
.Thus,
-boundedness is a nontrivial concept, true for some graph families and false for others.
Specific classes
Every class of graphs of bounded chromatic number is (trivially)
-bounded, with
equal to the bound on the chromatic number. This includes, for instance, the
planar graphs, the
bipartite graphs, and the graphs of bounded
degeneracy. Complementarily, the graphs in which the
independence number is bounded are also
-bounded, as
Ramsey's theorem implies that they have large cliques.
Vizing's theorem can be interpreted as stating that the line graphs are
-bounded, with
. The
claw-free graphs more generally are also
-bounded with
. This can be seen by using Ramsey's theorem to show that, in these graphs, a vertex with many neighbors must be part of a large clique.This bound is nearly tight in the worst case, but connected claw-free graphs that include three mutually-nonadjacent vertices have even smaller chromatic number,
.
Other
-bounded graph families include:
(
big O notation)
f(t)=2tlog2t+2log2log2t+10t
and (generalizing circle graphs) the "outerstring graphs", intersection graphs of bounded curves in the plane that all touch the unbounded face of the
arrangement of the curves
- The outerstring graph is an intersection graph of curves that lie in a common half-plane and have one endpoint on the boundary of that half-plane
- The intersection graphs of curves that cross a fixed curve between 1 and
times
, as every such graph has a vertex whose neighborhood is the union of two cliques
However, although intersection graphs of convex shapes, circle graphs, and outerstring graphs are all special cases of string graphs, the string graphs themselves are not
-bounded.They include as a special case the intersection graphs of
line segments, which are also not
-bounded.
Unsolved problems
, the graphs that do not contain
as an
induced subgraph are
-bounded. For instance, this would include the case of claw-free graphs, as a claw is a special kind of tree.However, the conjecture is known to be true only for certain special trees, including
paths and radius-two trees.
A
-bounded class of graphs is
polynomially
-bounded if it has a
-binding function
that grows at most polynomially as a function of
. As every
-vertex graph
contains an
independent set with cardinality at least
, all polynomially
-bounded classes have the
Erdős–Hajnal property.Another problem on
-boundedness was posed by Louis Esperet, who asked whether every hereditary class of graphs that is
-bounded is also polynomially
-bounded. A strong counterexample to Esperet's conjecture was announced in 2022 by Briański, Davies, and Walczak, who proved that there exist
-bounded hereditary classes whose function
can be chosen arbitrarily as long as it grows more quickly than a certain cubic polynomial.
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