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Triangle-free $d$-degenerate graphs have small fractional chromatic number

Anders Martinsson

Abstract

A well-known conjecture by Harris states that any triangle-free $d$-degenerate graph has fractional chromatic number at most $O\left(\frac{d}{\ln d}\right)$. This conjecture has gained much attention in recent years, and is known to have many interesting implications, including a conjecture by Esperet, Kang and Thomassé that any triangle-free graph with minimum degree $d$ contains a bipartite induced subgraph of minimum degree $Ω(\log d)$. Despite this attention, Harris' conjecture has remained wide open with no known improvement on the trivial upper bound, until now. In this article, we give an elegant proof of Harris' conjecture. In particular, we show that any triangle-free $d$-degenerate graph has fractional chromatic number at most $(4+o(1))\frac{d}{\ln d}.$ The conjecture of Esperet et al. follows as a direct consequence. We also prove a more general result, showing that for any triangle-free graph $G$, there exists a random independent set in which each vertex $v$ is included with probability $Ω(p(v))$, where $p:V(G)\rightarrow [0,1]$ is any function that satisfies a natural condition.

Triangle-free $d$-degenerate graphs have small fractional chromatic number

Abstract

A well-known conjecture by Harris states that any triangle-free -degenerate graph has fractional chromatic number at most . This conjecture has gained much attention in recent years, and is known to have many interesting implications, including a conjecture by Esperet, Kang and Thomassé that any triangle-free graph with minimum degree contains a bipartite induced subgraph of minimum degree . Despite this attention, Harris' conjecture has remained wide open with no known improvement on the trivial upper bound, until now. In this article, we give an elegant proof of Harris' conjecture. In particular, we show that any triangle-free -degenerate graph has fractional chromatic number at most The conjecture of Esperet et al. follows as a direct consequence. We also prove a more general result, showing that for any triangle-free graph , there exists a random independent set in which each vertex is included with probability , where is any function that satisfies a natural condition.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 2 sections, 3 theorems, 23 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.2

Suppose $G$ is a triangle-free and $d$-degenerate graph. Then $\chi_f(G)\leq (4+o(1))\frac{d}{\ln d},$ where the $o(1)$ term tends to $0$ as $d$ increases.

Theorems & Definitions (19)

  • Conjecture 1.1: cf. Conjecture 6.2 in Harris19
  • Theorem 1.2
  • Theorem 1.3
  • Conjecture 1.4
  • Theorem 2.1
  • Claim 2.2
  • proof
  • Claim 2.3
  • proof
  • Claim 2.4
  • ...and 9 more