Open Access
Vertex Covering with Monochromatic Pieces of few Colours
Author(s) -
Marlo Eugster,
Frank Mousset
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the electronic journal of combinatorics/the journal of combinatorics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.703
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1097-1440
pISSN - 1077-8926
DOI - 10.37236/7469
Subject(s) - combinatorics , mathematics , monochromatic color , independence number , vertex (graph theory) , hypergraph , chromatic scale , omega , graph , discrete mathematics , physics , quantum mechanics , optics
In 1995, Erdös and Gyárfás proved that in every $2$-colouring of the edges of $K_n$, there is a vertex cover by $2\sqrt{n}$ monochromatic paths of the same colour, which is optimal up to a constant factor. The main goal of this paper is to study the natural multi-colour generalization of this problem: given two positive integers $r,s$, what is the smallest number $pc_{r,s}(K_n)$ such that in every colouring of the edges of $K_n$ with $r$ colours, there exists a vertex cover of $K_n$ by $pc_{r,s}(K_n)$ monochromatic paths using altogether at most $s$ different colours?For fixed integers $r>s$ and as $n\to\infty$, we prove that $pc_{r,s}(K_n) = \Theta(n^{1/\chi})$, where $\chi=\max{\{1,2+2s-r\}}$ is the chromatic number of the Kneser graph $KG(r,r-s)$. More generally, if one replaces $K_n$ by an arbitrary $n$-vertex graph with fixed independence number $\alpha$, then we have $pc_{r,s}(G) = O(n^{1/\chi})$, where this time around $\chi$ is the chromatic number of the Kneser hypergraph $KG^{(\alpha+1)}(r,r-s)$. This result is tight in the sense that there exist graphs with independence number $\alpha$ for which $pc_{r,s}(G) = \Omega(n^{1/\chi})$. This is in sharp contrast to the case $r=s$, where it follows from a result of Sárközy (2012) that $pc_{r,r}(G)$ depends only on $r$ and $\alpha$, but not on the number of vertices.We obtain similar results for the situation where instead of using paths, one wants to cover a graph with bounded independence number by monochromatic cycles, or a complete graph by monochromatic $d$-regular graphs.