Shannon multigraph

From HandWiki

In the mathematical discipline of graph theory, Shannon multigraphs, named after Claude Shannon by (Vizing 1965), are a special type of triangle graphs, which are used in the field of edge coloring in particular.

A Shannon multigraph is multigraph with 3 vertices for which either of the following conditions holds:
  • a) all 3 vertices are connected by the same number of edges.
  • b) as in a) and one additional edge is added.

More precisely one speaks of Shannon multigraph Sh(n), if the three vertices are connected by n2, n2 and n+12 edges respectively. This multigraph has maximum degree n. Its multiplicity (the maximum number of edges in a set of edges that all have the same endpoints) is n+12.

Examples

Edge coloring

This nine-edge Shannon multigraph requires nine colors in any edge coloring; its vertex degree is six and its multiplicity is three.

According to a theorem of (Shannon 1949), every multigraph with maximum degree Δ has an edge coloring that uses at most 32Δ colors. When Δ is even, the example of the Shannon multigraph with multiplicity Δ/2 shows that this bound is tight: the vertex degree is exactly Δ, but each of the 32Δ edges is adjacent to every other edge, so it requires 32Δ colors in any proper edge coloring.

A version of Vizing's theorem (Vizing 1964) states that every multigraph with maximum degree Δ and multiplicity μ may be colored using at most Δ+μ colors. Again, this bound is tight for the Shannon multigraphs.

References

  • Fiorini, S.; Wilson, Robin James (1977), Edge-colourings of graphs, Research Notes in Mathematics, 16, London: Pitman, p. 34, ISBN 0-273-01129-4 
  • "A theorem on coloring the lines of a network", J. Math. Physics 28: 148–151, 1949, doi:10.1002/sapm1949281148 .
  • Volkmann, Lutz (1996) (in German), Fundamente der Graphentheorie, Wien: Springer, p. 289, ISBN 3-211-82774-9 .
  • "On an estimate of the chromatic class of a p-graph", Diskret. Analiz. 3: 25–30 .
  • Vizing, V. G. (1965), "The chromatic class of a multigraph", Kibernetika 1965 (3): 29–39 .