Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notation
- Chapter 1 Basic concepts
- Chapter 2 Introduction to bipartite graphs
- Chapter 3 Metric properties
- Chapter 4 Connectivity
- Chapter 5 Maximum matchings
- Chapter 6 Expanding properties
- Chapter 7 Subgraphs with restricted degrees
- Chapter 8 Edge colourings
- Chapter 9 Doubly stochastic matrices and bipartite graphs
- Chapter 10 Coverings
- Chapter 11 Some combinatorial applications
- Chapter 12 Bipartite subgraphs of arbitrary graphs
- Appendix
- References
- Index
Chapter 8 - Edge colourings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notation
- Chapter 1 Basic concepts
- Chapter 2 Introduction to bipartite graphs
- Chapter 3 Metric properties
- Chapter 4 Connectivity
- Chapter 5 Maximum matchings
- Chapter 6 Expanding properties
- Chapter 7 Subgraphs with restricted degrees
- Chapter 8 Edge colourings
- Chapter 9 Doubly stochastic matrices and bipartite graphs
- Chapter 10 Coverings
- Chapter 11 Some combinatorial applications
- Chapter 12 Bipartite subgraphs of arbitrary graphs
- Appendix
- References
- Index
Summary
Edge colourings and timetables
An edge colouring of a graph G with the colours α1, …, αt is an assignment of the colours to the edges of G, one colour to each edge. Such a colouring is called proper if no pair of adjacent edges receive the same colour. More formally, an edge colouring of G with colours from the set C = {α1, …, αt} is a mapping f : E(G) → C. If f(e) = αk then we say that the edge e is coloured αk. The set of edges of colour αk we denote by M(f, αk). Then M(f, αk) is a matching for every k = 1, …, t if and only if f is a proper edge colouring. Usually we shall think of C = {1, 2, …, t}. We shall call an edge colouring with these colours 1, …, t simply a t-colouring and call a path P (k, l)-coloured if its edges are alternately coloured with the colours k and l. A (k, l)-coloured path P is called maximal if there is no other (k, l)-coloured path P′ with V(P) ⊆ V(P′).
Of course, if we have too few colours in the set C then there is no valid proper edge colouring. We call the minimum t for which there exists a proper t-colouring of G the chromatic index of G, which we denote by X′(G).
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- Bipartite Graphs and their Applications , pp. 125 - 162Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998