Improper coloring of graphs on surfaces
Ilkyoo Choi, Louis Esperet

TL;DR
This paper extends classical graph coloring results from planar graphs to graphs on surfaces, establishing new bounds on improper colorings that depend on the surface's genus and girth, with tight bounds and sharp conditions.
Contribution
It generalizes known planar graph coloring theorems to graphs on surfaces, providing new bounds on improper colorings based on genus and girth, and proves these bounds are tight.
Findings
Graphs on surfaces of genus g are (0,0,0,9g-4)-colorable.
Triangle-free graphs on surfaces are (0,0,O(g))-colorable.
Graphs with girth at least 7 are (0,O(√g))-colorable.
Abstract
A graph is -colorable if its vertex set can be partitioned into sets , such that for each , the subgraph of induced by has maximum degree at most . The Four Color Theorem states that every planar graph is -colorable, and a classical result of Cowen, Cowen, and Woodall shows that every planar graph is -colorable. In this paper, we extend both of these results to graphs on surfaces. Namely, we show that every graph embeddable on a surface of Euler genus is -colorable and -colorable. Moreover, these graphs are also -colorable and -colorable. We also prove that every triangle-free graph that is embeddable on a surface of Euler genus is -colorable. This is an extension of Gr\"{o}tzsch's…
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