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A note on the $k$-defect number: Vertex Coloring with a Fixed Number of Monochromatic Edges

Eunice Mphako-Banda, Christo Kriel, Alex Alochukwu

Abstract

In this paper, we introduce and study a novel graph parameter called the $k$-defect number, denoted $φ_{k}(G)$, for a graph $G$ and an integer $0\leq k\leq |E(G)|$. Unlike traditional defective colorings that bound the local degree within monochromatic components, the $k$-defect number represents the smallest number of colors required to achieve a vertex coloring of $G$ having exactly \emph{$k$ monochromatic edges (also termed ``bad edges")}. This parameter generalizes the well-known chromatic number of a graph, $χ(G)$, which is precisely $φ_{0}(G)$. We establish fundamental properties of the $k$-defect number and derive bounds on $φ_{k}(G)$ for specific graph classes, including trees, cycles, and wheels. Furthermore, we extend and generalize several classical properties of the chromatic number to this new edge-centric $k$-defect framework for values of $1\leq k\leq |E(G)|$.

A note on the $k$-defect number: Vertex Coloring with a Fixed Number of Monochromatic Edges

Abstract

In this paper, we introduce and study a novel graph parameter called the -defect number, denoted , for a graph and an integer . Unlike traditional defective colorings that bound the local degree within monochromatic components, the -defect number represents the smallest number of colors required to achieve a vertex coloring of having exactly \emph{ monochromatic edges (also termed ``bad edges")}. This parameter generalizes the well-known chromatic number of a graph, , which is precisely . We establish fundamental properties of the -defect number and derive bounds on for specific graph classes, including trees, cycles, and wheels. Furthermore, we extend and generalize several classical properties of the chromatic number to this new edge-centric -defect framework for values of .

Paper Structure

This paper contains 6 sections, 16 theorems, 8 equations, 1 figure.

Key Result

Proposition 2.1

Let $G$ be a graph and $\chi(G),$ the chromatic number $G.$

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1:

Theorems & Definitions (28)

  • Proposition 2.1
  • Proposition 2.2
  • Theorem 2.3
  • Proposition 2.4
  • Definition 3.1
  • Definition 3.2
  • Definition 3.3
  • Proposition 3.4
  • Proposition 3.5
  • Proposition 3.6
  • ...and 18 more