An acyclic edge coloring of a graph is a proper edge coloring such that there are no bichromatic cycles. The acyclic chromatic index of a graph is the minimum number k such that there is an acyclic edge coloring using k colors and is denoted by a' (G). A graph G is called fully subdivided if it is obtained from another graph H by replacing every edge by a path of length at least two. Fully subdivided graphs are known to be acyclically edge colorable using Δ + 1 colors since they are properly contained in 2-degenerate graphs which are acyclically edge colorable using Δ + 1 colors. Muthu, Narayanan and Subramanian gave a simple direct proof of this fact for the fully subdivided graphs. Fiamcik has shown that if we subdivide every edge in a cubic graph with at most two exceptions to get a graph G, then a'(G) = 3. In this paper we generalise the bound to Δ for all fully subdivided graphs improving the result of Muthu et al. In particular, we prove that if G is a fully subdivided graph and Δ(G) ≥ 3, then a'(G) = Δ(G). Consider a graph G = (V, E), with E = E(T) ∪ E(C) where T is a rooted tree on the vertex set V and C is a simple cycle on the leaves of T. Such a graph G is called a Halin graph if G has a planar embedding and T has no vertices of degree 2. Let Kn denote a complete graph on n vertices. Let G be a Halin graph with maximum degree Δ. We prove that, (equation) © 2012 Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science (DMTCS), Nancy, France.
CITATION STYLE
Basavaraju, M. (2012). Acyclic chromatic index of fully subdivided graphs and Halin graphs. Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science, 14(2), 165–172. https://doi.org/10.46298/dmtcs.590
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