Mycielskian


In the mathematical area of graph theory, the Mycielskian or Mycielski graph of an undirected graph is a larger graph formed from it by a construction of. The construction preserves the property of being triangle-free but increases the chromatic number; by applying the construction repeatedly to a triangle-free starting graph, Mycielski showed that there exist triangle-free graphs with arbitrarily large chromatic number.

Construction

Let the n vertices of the given graph G be v1, v2,..., vn. The Mycielski graph μ contains G itself as a subgraph, together with n+1 additional vertices: a vertex ui corresponding to each vertex vi of G, and an extra vertex w. Each vertex ui is connected by an edge to w, so that these vertices form a subgraph in the form of a star K1,n. In addition, for each edge vivj of G, the Mycielski graph includes two edges, uivj and viuj.
Thus, if G has n vertices and m edges, μ has 2n+1 vertices and 3m+n edges.
The only new triangles in μ are of the form vivjuk, where vivjvk is a triangle in G. Thus, if G is triangle-free, so is μ.
To see that the construction increases the chromatic number, consider a proper k-coloring of ; that is, a mapping with for adjacent vertices x,y. If we had for all i, then we could define a proper -coloring of G by when , and otherwise. But this is impossible for, so c must use all k colors for, and any proper coloring of the last vertex w must use an extra color. That is,.

Iterated Mycielskians

Applying the Mycielskian repeatedly, starting with the one-edge graph, produces a sequence of graphs Mi = μ, sometimes called the Mycielski graphs. The first few graphs in this sequence are the graph M2 = K2 with two vertices connected by an edge, the cycle graph M3 = C5, and the Grötzsch graph M4 with 11 vertices and 20 edges.
In general, the graph Mi is triangle-free, -vertex-connected, and i-chromatic. The number of vertices in Mi for i ≥ 2 is 3 × 2i−2 − 1, while the number of edges for i = 2, 3,... is:

Properties

A generalization of the Mycielskian, called a cone over a graph, was introduced by and further studied by and. In this construction, one forms a graph Δi from a given graph G by taking the tensor product of graphs G × H, where H is a path of length i with a self-loop at one end, and then collapsing into a single supervertex all of the vertices associated with the vertex of H at the non-loop end of the path. The Mycielskian itself can be formed in this way as μ = Δ2.
While the cone construction does not always increase the chromatic number, proved that it does so when applied iteratively to K2. That is, define a sequence of families of graphs, called generalized Mycielskians, as
For example, ℳ is the family of odd cycles. Then each graph in ℳ is k-chromatic. The proof uses methods of topological combinatorics developed by László Lovász to compute the chromatic number of Kneser graphs.
The triangle-free property is then strengthened as follows: if one only applies the cone construction Δi for ir, then the resulting graph has odd girth at least 2r + 1, that is, it contains no odd cycles of length less than 2r + 1.
Thus generalized Mycielskians provide a simple construction of graphs with high chromatic number and high odd girth.