The complexity of determining the rainbow vertex-connection of graphs
Abstract
A vertex-colored graph is rainbow vertex-connected if any two vertices are connected by a path whose internal vertices have distinct colors, which was introduced by Krivelevich and Yuster. The rainbow vertex-connection of a connected graph G, denoted by rvc(G), is the smallest number of colors that are needed in order to make G rainbow vertex-connected. In this paper, we study the computational complexity of vertex-rainbow connection of graphs and prove that computing rvc(G) is NP-Hard. Moreover, we show that it is already NP-Complete to decide whether rvc(G)=2. We also prove that the following problem is NP-Complete: given a vertex-colored graph G, check whether the given coloring makes G rainbow vertex-connected.
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