Decompositions into two linear forests of bounded lengths

Abstract

For some k ∈ Z≥ 0 ∞, we call a linear forest k-bounded if each of its components has at most k edges. We will say a (k,)-bounded linear forest decomposition of a graph G is a partition of E(G) into the edge sets of two linear forests Fk,F where Fk is k-bounded and F is -bounded. We show that the problem of deciding whether a given graph has such a decomposition is NP-complete if both k and are at least 2, NP-complete if k≥ 9 and =1, and is in P for (k,)=(2,1). Before this, the only known NP-complete cases were the (2,2) and (3,3) cases. Our hardness result answers a question of Bermond et al. from 1984. We also show that planar graphs of girth at least nine decompose into a linear forest and a matching, which in particular is stronger than 3-edge-colouring such graphs.

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