Treffer: Track layouts of graphs

Title:
Track layouts of graphs
Authors:
Contributors:
The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Publication Year:
2003
Collection:
CiteSeerX
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift text
File Description:
application/pdf
Language:
English
Rights:
Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it.
Accession Number:
edsbas.86ECB54C
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

In a total order of the vertices of a graph, two edges with no endpoint in common can be crossing, nested, or disjoint. A k-stack (respectively, k-queue, k-arch) layout of a graph consists of a total order of the vertices, and a partition of the edges into k sets of pairwise non-crossing (non-nested, non-disjoint) edges. Motivated by numerous applications, stack layouts (also called book embeddings) and queue layouts are widely studied in the literature, while this is the first paper to investigate arch layouts. Our main result is a characterisation of k-arch graphs as the almost (k+1)-colourable graphs. That is, the graphs G with a set S of at most k vertices, such that G \ S is (k+ 1)-colourable. In addition, we survey the following fundamental questions regarding each type of layout, and in the case of queue layouts, provide simple proofs of a number of existing results. How does one partition the edges given a fixed ordering of the vertices? What is the maximum number of edges in each type of layout? What is the maximum chromatic number of a graph admitting each type of layout? What is the computational complexity of recognising the graphs that admit each type of layout?