arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1302.3811 [math.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Indicated coloring of matroids

Michał Lasoń

Published 2013-02-15Version 1

A coloring of a matroid is proper if elements of the same color form an independent set. For a loopless matroid M, its chromatic number \chi(M) is the minimum number of colors that suffices to color properly the ground set E of M. In this note we study a game-theoretic variant of this parameter proposed by Grytczuk. Suppose that in each round of the game Alice indicates an uncolored yet element e of E, then Bob colors it using a color from a fixed set of colors C. The rule Bob has to obey is that it is a proper coloring. The game ends if the whole matroid has been colored or if Bob can not color e using any color of C. Alice wins in the first case, while Bob in the second. The minimum size of the set of colors C for which Alice has a winning strategy is called the indicated chromatic number of M, denoted by \chi_i(M). We prove that \chi_i(M)=\chi(M).

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1107.1869 [math.CO] (Published 2011-07-10)
About maximal number of edges in hypergraph-clique with chromatic number 3
arXiv:1110.1756 [math.CO] (Published 2011-10-08)
About dependence of the number of edges and vertices in hypergraph clique with chromatic number 3
arXiv:1412.6349 [math.CO] (Published 2014-12-19)
The chromatic number of a signed graph