A Complexity Dichotomy for Critical Values of the b-Chromatic Number of Graphs

Abstract

A b-coloring of a graph G is a proper coloring of its vertices such that each color class contains a vertex that has at least one neighbor in all the other color classes. The b-Coloring problem asks whether a graph G has a b-coloring with k colors. The b-chromatic number of a graph G, denoted by b(G), is the maximum number k such that G admits a b-coloring with k colors. We consider the complexity of the b-Coloring problem, whenever the value of k is close to one of two upper bounds on b(G): The maximum degree (G) plus one, and the m-degree, denoted by m(G), which is defined as the maximum number i such that G has i vertices of degree at least i-1. We obtain a dichotomy result stating that for fixed k ∈ \(G) + 1 - p, m(G) - p\, the problem is polynomial-time solvable whenever p ∈ \0, 1\ and, even when k = 3, it is NP-complete whenever p 2. We furthermore consider parameterizations of the b-Coloring problem that involve the maximum degree (G) of the input graph G and give two FPT-algorithms. First, we show that deciding whether a graph G has a b-coloring with m(G) colors is FPT parameterized by (G). Second, we show that b-Coloring is FPT parameterized by (G) + k(G), where k(G) denotes the number of vertices of degree at least k.

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