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Vertex arboricity of cographs. (English) Zbl 1466.05181

Summary: Arboricity is a graph parameter akin to chromatic number, in that it seeks to partition the vertices into the smallest number of sparse subgraphs. Where for the chromatic number we are partitioning the vertices into independent sets, for the arboricity we want to partition the vertices into cycle-free subsets (i.e., forests). Arboricity is NP-hard in general, and our focus is on the arboricity of cographs. For arboricity two, we obtain the complete list of minimal cograph obstructions. These minimal obstructions do generalize to higher arboricities; however, we no longer have a complete list, and in fact, the number of minimal cograph obstructions grows exponentially with arboricity. We obtain bounds on their size and the height of their cotrees.
More generally, we consider the following common generalization of colouring and partition into forests: given non-negative integers \(p\) and \(q\), we ask if a given cograph \(G\) admits a vertex partition into \(p\) forests and \(q\) independent sets. We give a polynomial-time dynamic programming algorithm for this problem. In fact, the algorithm solves a more general problem which also includes several other problems such as finding a maximum \(q\)-colourable subgraph, maximum subgraph of arboricity-\(p\), minimum feedback vertex set and minimum \(q\) of a \(q\)-colourable feedback vertex set.

MSC:

05C70 Edge subsets with special properties (factorization, matching, partitioning, covering and packing, etc.)
05C15 Coloring of graphs and hypergraphs
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