Local and Union Boxicity
Abstract
The boxicity box(H) of a graph H is the smallest integer d such that H is the intersection of d interval graphs, or equivalently, that H is the intersection graph of axis-aligned boxes in Rd. These intersection representations can be interpreted as covering representations of the complement Hc of H with co-interval graphs, that is, complements of interval graphs. We follow the recent framework of global, local and folded covering numbers (Knauer and Ueckerdt, Discrete Mathematics 339 (2016)) to define two new parameters: the local boxicity box(H) and the union boxicity box(H) of H. The union boxicity of H is the smallest d such that Hc can be covered with d vertex-disjoint unions of co-interval graphs, while the local boxicity of H is the smallest d such that Hc can be covered with co-interval graphs, at most d at every vertex. We show that for every graph H we have box(H) ≤ box(H) ≤ box(H) and that each of these inequalities can be arbitrarily far apart. Moreover, we show that local and union boxicity are also characterized by intersection representations of appropriate axis-aligned boxes in Rd. We demonstrate with a few striking examples, that in a sense, the local boxicity is a better indication for the complexity of a graph, than the classical boxicity.