ABSTRACT

With Chromatic Graph Theory, Second Edition, the authors present various fundamentals of graph theory that lie outside of graph colorings, including basic terminology and results, trees and connectivity, Eulerian and Hamiltonian graphs, matchings and factorizations, and graph embeddings. Readers will see that the authors accomplished the primary goal of this textbook, which is to introduce graph theory with a coloring theme and to look at graph colorings in various ways.

The textbook also covers vertex colorings and bounds for the chromatic number, vertex colorings of graphs embedded on surfaces, and a variety of restricted vertex colorings. The authors also describe edge colorings, monochromatic and rainbow edge colorings, complete vertex colorings, several distinguishing vertex and edge colorings.

 

Features of the Second Edition:

  • The book can be used for a first course in graph theory as well as a graduate course
  • The primary topic in the book is graph coloring
  • The book begins with an introduction to graph theory so assumes no previous course
  • The authors are the most widely-published team on graph theory
  • Many new examples and exercises enhance the new edition

chapter Chapter 0|26 pages

The Origin of Graph Colorings

chapter Chapter 1|26 pages

Introduction to Graphs

chapter Chapter 2|18 pages

Trees and Connectivity

chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

Eulerian and Hamiltonian Graphs

chapter Chapter 4|18 pages

Matchings and Factorization

chapter Chapter 5|38 pages

Graph Embeddings

chapter Chapter 6|28 pages

Introduction to Vertex Colorings

chapter Chapter 7|30 pages

Bounds for the Chromatic Number

chapter Chapter 8|18 pages

Coloring Graphs on Surfaces

chapter Chapter 9|26 pages

Restricted Vertex Colorings

chapter Chapter 10|39 pages

Edge Colorings

chapter Chapter 11|25 pages

Ramsey Theory

chapter Chapter 12|27 pages

Monochromatic Ramsey Theory

chapter Chapter 13|32 pages

Color Connection

chapter Chapter 14|30 pages

Distance and Colorings

chapter Chapter 15|18 pages

Domination and Colorings

chapter Chapter 16|38 pages

Induced Colorings

chapter Chapter 17|14 pages

The Four Color Theorem Revisited