Meyniel graph
In graph theory, a Meyniel graph is a graph in which every odd cycle of length five or more has at least two chords (edges connecting non-consecutive vertices of the cycle).[1] The chords may be uncrossed (as shown in the figure) or they may cross each other, as long as there are at least two of them.
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The Meyniel graphs are named after Henri Meyniel (also known for Meyniel's conjecture), who proved that they are perfect graphs in 1976,[2] long before the proof of the strong perfect graph theorem completely characterized the perfect graphs. The same result was independently discovered by Markosjan & Karapetjan (1976).[3]
Perfection
The Meyniel graphs are a subclass of the perfect graphs. Every induced subgraph of a Meyniel graph is another Meyniel graph, and in every Meyniel graph the size of a maximum clique equals the minimum number of colors needed in a graph coloring. Thus, the Meyniel graphs meet the definition of being a perfect graph, that the clique number equals the chromatic number in every induced subgraph.[1][2][3]
Meyniel graphs are also called the very strongly perfect graphs, because (as Meyniel conjectured and Hoàng proved) they can be characterized by a property generalizing the defining property of the strongly perfect graphs: in every induced subgraph of a Meyniel graph, every vertex belongs to an independent set that intersects every maximal clique.[1][4]
Related graph classes
The Meyniel graphs contain the chordal graphs, the parity graphs, and their subclasses the interval graphs, distance-hereditary graphs, bipartite graphs, and line perfect graphs.[1]
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Although Meyniel graphs form a very general subclass of the perfect graphs, they do not include all perfect graphs. For instance the house graph (a pentagon with only one chord) is perfect but is not a Meyniel graph.
Algorithms and complexity
Meyniel graphs can be recognized in polynomial time,[5] and several graph optimization problems including graph coloring that are NP-hard for arbitrary graphs can be solved in polynomial time for Meyniel graphs.[6][7]
References
- Meyniel graphs, Information System on Graph Classes and their Inclusions, retrieved 2016-09-25.
- Meyniel, H. (1976), "On the perfect graph conjecture", Discrete Mathematics, 16 (4): 339–342, doi:10.1016/S0012-365X(76)80008-8, MR 0439682.
- Markosjan, S. E.; Karapetjan, I. A. (1976), "Perfect graphs", Doklady Akademiya Nauk Armyanskoĭ SSR, 63 (5): 292–296, MR 0450130.
- Hoàng, C. T. (1987), "On a conjecture of Meyniel", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 42 (3): 302–312, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(87)90047-5, MR 0888682.
- Burlet, M.; Fonlupt, J. (1984), "Polynomial algorithm to recognize a Meyniel graph", Topics on perfect graphs, North-Holland Math. Stud., vol. 88, North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp. 225–252, doi:10.1016/S0304-0208(08)72938-4, hdl:10068/49205, MR 0778765.
- Hertz, A. (1990), "A fast algorithm for coloring Meyniel graphs", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 50 (2): 231–240, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(90)90078-E, MR 1081227.
- Roussel, F.; Rusu, I. (2001), "An O(n2) algorithm to color Meyniel graphs", Discrete Mathematics, 235 (1–3): 107–123, doi:10.1016/S0012-365X(00)00264-8, MR 1829840.