Abstract
Several classical constructions illustrate the fact that the chromatic number of a graph may be arbitrarily large compared to its clique number. However, until very recently no such construction was known for intersection graphs of geometric objects in the plane. We provide a general construction that for any arc-connected compact set X in ℝ2 that is not an axis-aligned rectangle and for any positive integer k produces a family F of sets, each obtained by an independent horizontal and vertical scaling and translation of X, such that no three sets in F pairwise intersect and Χ(F)>k. This provides a negative answer to a question of Gyárfás and Lehel for L-shapes. With extra conditions we also show how to construct a triangle-free family of homothetic (uniformly scaled) copies of a set with arbitrarily large chromatic number. This applies to many common shapes, like circles, square boundaries or equilateral L-shapes. Additionally, we reveal a surprising connection between coloring geometric objects in the plane and on-line coloring of intervals on the line. © 2013 The Author(s).
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Pawlik, A., Kozik, J., Krawczyk, T., Lasoń, M., Micek, P., Trotter, W. T., & Walczak, B. (2013). Triangle-Free Geometric Intersection Graphs with Large Chromatic Number. Discrete and Computational Geometry, 50(3), 714–726. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00454-013-9534-9
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.