Edge coloring of a graph $G$ with node degrees divisible by $p$ and number of edges NOT divisible by $p$












4












$begingroup$


Given a graph $G=(V,E)$ with node degrees divisible by $p$ and number of edges not divisible by $p$, show that there exists a coloring (using $p$ colors) of the edges such that for every vertex the number of edges incident with that vertex in any two color classes differ by at most one.



Assume $p ge 2$.



This is what I've been able to deduce: let $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ be the degrees of the $n = |V|$ nodes of $G$. Because $p mid d_1, p mid d_2,...,p mid d_n$, we can conclude that $p mid 2*|E|$. Knowing that $p nmid |E|$, we further conclude that $2 mid p$, so $p$ and $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ must be even. Having deduced this information, I tend to believe that the coloring must be somehow related to the Euler tour of the graph (because $G$ is an Eulerian graph). But I don't know how to continue my reasoning.



Any help will be strongly appreciated! Thanks!










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$endgroup$








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    "differ by at most one" would in fact imply "do not differ", wouldn't it?
    $endgroup$
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    Jan 10 at 19:22






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I believe so. Given a node with degree $d$ and having $p$, each color must appear $d / p$ times. If it does not, then the difference would be at least 2. Is this correct?
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 19:25










  • $begingroup$
    For $p = 2$, I think that I can take the Eulerian tournament and color its edges alternatively with 0s and 1s. But I'm failing to extend this idea for $p gt 2$.
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 21:24








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The question as worded isn't correct though: For example, in any 2-coloring of the edges of a 3-cycle($p=2$) there is one vertex that will be incident to 2 edges of the same color, and none of the other color.
    $endgroup$
    – Mike
    Jan 11 at 15:35










  • $begingroup$
    @HagenvonEitzen Yes. Indeed, let $c_1,dots,c_p$ be the set of used colors and $v$ be any vertex of $G$. For any color $c_i$ let $k_i$ be a number of edges incident to $v$ colored with a color $c_i$. There exists a number $k$ such that $k=k_i$ or $k=k_i+1$ for each color $i$. Let $rle p$ be the number of colors $i$ with $k=k_i+1$. Since $requiv sum k_iequiv deg vequiv 0pmod p$, we have $r=0$ or $r=p$. In both cases all $k_i$’s are equal.
    $endgroup$
    – Alex Ravsky
    Jan 14 at 6:24
















4












$begingroup$


Given a graph $G=(V,E)$ with node degrees divisible by $p$ and number of edges not divisible by $p$, show that there exists a coloring (using $p$ colors) of the edges such that for every vertex the number of edges incident with that vertex in any two color classes differ by at most one.



Assume $p ge 2$.



This is what I've been able to deduce: let $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ be the degrees of the $n = |V|$ nodes of $G$. Because $p mid d_1, p mid d_2,...,p mid d_n$, we can conclude that $p mid 2*|E|$. Knowing that $p nmid |E|$, we further conclude that $2 mid p$, so $p$ and $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ must be even. Having deduced this information, I tend to believe that the coloring must be somehow related to the Euler tour of the graph (because $G$ is an Eulerian graph). But I don't know how to continue my reasoning.



Any help will be strongly appreciated! Thanks!










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    "differ by at most one" would in fact imply "do not differ", wouldn't it?
    $endgroup$
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    Jan 10 at 19:22






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I believe so. Given a node with degree $d$ and having $p$, each color must appear $d / p$ times. If it does not, then the difference would be at least 2. Is this correct?
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 19:25










  • $begingroup$
    For $p = 2$, I think that I can take the Eulerian tournament and color its edges alternatively with 0s and 1s. But I'm failing to extend this idea for $p gt 2$.
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 21:24








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The question as worded isn't correct though: For example, in any 2-coloring of the edges of a 3-cycle($p=2$) there is one vertex that will be incident to 2 edges of the same color, and none of the other color.
    $endgroup$
    – Mike
    Jan 11 at 15:35










  • $begingroup$
    @HagenvonEitzen Yes. Indeed, let $c_1,dots,c_p$ be the set of used colors and $v$ be any vertex of $G$. For any color $c_i$ let $k_i$ be a number of edges incident to $v$ colored with a color $c_i$. There exists a number $k$ such that $k=k_i$ or $k=k_i+1$ for each color $i$. Let $rle p$ be the number of colors $i$ with $k=k_i+1$. Since $requiv sum k_iequiv deg vequiv 0pmod p$, we have $r=0$ or $r=p$. In both cases all $k_i$’s are equal.
    $endgroup$
    – Alex Ravsky
    Jan 14 at 6:24














4












4








4


1



$begingroup$


Given a graph $G=(V,E)$ with node degrees divisible by $p$ and number of edges not divisible by $p$, show that there exists a coloring (using $p$ colors) of the edges such that for every vertex the number of edges incident with that vertex in any two color classes differ by at most one.



Assume $p ge 2$.



This is what I've been able to deduce: let $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ be the degrees of the $n = |V|$ nodes of $G$. Because $p mid d_1, p mid d_2,...,p mid d_n$, we can conclude that $p mid 2*|E|$. Knowing that $p nmid |E|$, we further conclude that $2 mid p$, so $p$ and $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ must be even. Having deduced this information, I tend to believe that the coloring must be somehow related to the Euler tour of the graph (because $G$ is an Eulerian graph). But I don't know how to continue my reasoning.



Any help will be strongly appreciated! Thanks!










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$




Given a graph $G=(V,E)$ with node degrees divisible by $p$ and number of edges not divisible by $p$, show that there exists a coloring (using $p$ colors) of the edges such that for every vertex the number of edges incident with that vertex in any two color classes differ by at most one.



Assume $p ge 2$.



This is what I've been able to deduce: let $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ be the degrees of the $n = |V|$ nodes of $G$. Because $p mid d_1, p mid d_2,...,p mid d_n$, we can conclude that $p mid 2*|E|$. Knowing that $p nmid |E|$, we further conclude that $2 mid p$, so $p$ and $d_1, d_2,...,d_n$ must be even. Having deduced this information, I tend to believe that the coloring must be somehow related to the Euler tour of the graph (because $G$ is an Eulerian graph). But I don't know how to continue my reasoning.



Any help will be strongly appreciated! Thanks!







graph-theory coloring






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share|cite|improve this question











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asked Jan 10 at 19:17









Răzvan-Andrei CiocoiuRăzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu

576




576








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    "differ by at most one" would in fact imply "do not differ", wouldn't it?
    $endgroup$
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    Jan 10 at 19:22






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I believe so. Given a node with degree $d$ and having $p$, each color must appear $d / p$ times. If it does not, then the difference would be at least 2. Is this correct?
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 19:25










  • $begingroup$
    For $p = 2$, I think that I can take the Eulerian tournament and color its edges alternatively with 0s and 1s. But I'm failing to extend this idea for $p gt 2$.
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 21:24








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The question as worded isn't correct though: For example, in any 2-coloring of the edges of a 3-cycle($p=2$) there is one vertex that will be incident to 2 edges of the same color, and none of the other color.
    $endgroup$
    – Mike
    Jan 11 at 15:35










  • $begingroup$
    @HagenvonEitzen Yes. Indeed, let $c_1,dots,c_p$ be the set of used colors and $v$ be any vertex of $G$. For any color $c_i$ let $k_i$ be a number of edges incident to $v$ colored with a color $c_i$. There exists a number $k$ such that $k=k_i$ or $k=k_i+1$ for each color $i$. Let $rle p$ be the number of colors $i$ with $k=k_i+1$. Since $requiv sum k_iequiv deg vequiv 0pmod p$, we have $r=0$ or $r=p$. In both cases all $k_i$’s are equal.
    $endgroup$
    – Alex Ravsky
    Jan 14 at 6:24














  • 4




    $begingroup$
    "differ by at most one" would in fact imply "do not differ", wouldn't it?
    $endgroup$
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    Jan 10 at 19:22






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I believe so. Given a node with degree $d$ and having $p$, each color must appear $d / p$ times. If it does not, then the difference would be at least 2. Is this correct?
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 19:25










  • $begingroup$
    For $p = 2$, I think that I can take the Eulerian tournament and color its edges alternatively with 0s and 1s. But I'm failing to extend this idea for $p gt 2$.
    $endgroup$
    – Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
    Jan 10 at 21:24








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The question as worded isn't correct though: For example, in any 2-coloring of the edges of a 3-cycle($p=2$) there is one vertex that will be incident to 2 edges of the same color, and none of the other color.
    $endgroup$
    – Mike
    Jan 11 at 15:35










  • $begingroup$
    @HagenvonEitzen Yes. Indeed, let $c_1,dots,c_p$ be the set of used colors and $v$ be any vertex of $G$. For any color $c_i$ let $k_i$ be a number of edges incident to $v$ colored with a color $c_i$. There exists a number $k$ such that $k=k_i$ or $k=k_i+1$ for each color $i$. Let $rle p$ be the number of colors $i$ with $k=k_i+1$. Since $requiv sum k_iequiv deg vequiv 0pmod p$, we have $r=0$ or $r=p$. In both cases all $k_i$’s are equal.
    $endgroup$
    – Alex Ravsky
    Jan 14 at 6:24








4




4




$begingroup$
"differ by at most one" would in fact imply "do not differ", wouldn't it?
$endgroup$
– Hagen von Eitzen
Jan 10 at 19:22




$begingroup$
"differ by at most one" would in fact imply "do not differ", wouldn't it?
$endgroup$
– Hagen von Eitzen
Jan 10 at 19:22




2




2




$begingroup$
I believe so. Given a node with degree $d$ and having $p$, each color must appear $d / p$ times. If it does not, then the difference would be at least 2. Is this correct?
$endgroup$
– Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
Jan 10 at 19:25




$begingroup$
I believe so. Given a node with degree $d$ and having $p$, each color must appear $d / p$ times. If it does not, then the difference would be at least 2. Is this correct?
$endgroup$
– Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
Jan 10 at 19:25












$begingroup$
For $p = 2$, I think that I can take the Eulerian tournament and color its edges alternatively with 0s and 1s. But I'm failing to extend this idea for $p gt 2$.
$endgroup$
– Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
Jan 10 at 21:24






$begingroup$
For $p = 2$, I think that I can take the Eulerian tournament and color its edges alternatively with 0s and 1s. But I'm failing to extend this idea for $p gt 2$.
$endgroup$
– Răzvan-Andrei Ciocoiu
Jan 10 at 21:24






1




1




$begingroup$
The question as worded isn't correct though: For example, in any 2-coloring of the edges of a 3-cycle($p=2$) there is one vertex that will be incident to 2 edges of the same color, and none of the other color.
$endgroup$
– Mike
Jan 11 at 15:35




$begingroup$
The question as worded isn't correct though: For example, in any 2-coloring of the edges of a 3-cycle($p=2$) there is one vertex that will be incident to 2 edges of the same color, and none of the other color.
$endgroup$
– Mike
Jan 11 at 15:35












$begingroup$
@HagenvonEitzen Yes. Indeed, let $c_1,dots,c_p$ be the set of used colors and $v$ be any vertex of $G$. For any color $c_i$ let $k_i$ be a number of edges incident to $v$ colored with a color $c_i$. There exists a number $k$ such that $k=k_i$ or $k=k_i+1$ for each color $i$. Let $rle p$ be the number of colors $i$ with $k=k_i+1$. Since $requiv sum k_iequiv deg vequiv 0pmod p$, we have $r=0$ or $r=p$. In both cases all $k_i$’s are equal.
$endgroup$
– Alex Ravsky
Jan 14 at 6:24




$begingroup$
@HagenvonEitzen Yes. Indeed, let $c_1,dots,c_p$ be the set of used colors and $v$ be any vertex of $G$. For any color $c_i$ let $k_i$ be a number of edges incident to $v$ colored with a color $c_i$. There exists a number $k$ such that $k=k_i$ or $k=k_i+1$ for each color $i$. Let $rle p$ be the number of colors $i$ with $k=k_i+1$. Since $requiv sum k_iequiv deg vequiv 0pmod p$, we have $r=0$ or $r=p$. In both cases all $k_i$’s are equal.
$endgroup$
– Alex Ravsky
Jan 14 at 6:24










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