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arxiv: 2504.20978 · v3 · pith:URJC2NXJnew · submitted 2025-04-29 · 🧮 math.CO

Coloring graphs as complete graph invariants

classification 🧮 math.CO
keywords coloringgraphmathcalcolorsgraphscompletenumbersurplus
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We investigate the extent to which the $k$-coloring graph $\mathcal{C}_{k}(G)$ uniquely determines the base graph $G$ and the number of colors $k$. The vertices of $\mathcal{C}_{k}(G)$ are the proper $k$-colorings of $G$, and edges connect colorings that differ on exactly one vertex. There are nonisomorphic graphs $G_1$ and $G_2$ with isomorphic coloring graphs, so $\mathcal{C}_{k}(G)$ is not a complete invariant in general. However, for color palettes with surplus colors (when the number of colors $k$ is greater than the chromatic number), we prove that the coloring graph is a complete invariant. Specifically, provided that $k_1 > \chi(G_1)$, we show that $\mathcal{C}_{k_1}(G_1)\cong \mathcal{C}_{k_2}(G_2)$ implies $G_1\cong G_2$ and $k_1=k_2$. Thus, there is a natural bijection between pairs $(G, k)$ with $k > \chi(G)$ and their coloring graphs $\mathcal{C}_k(G)$. Furthermore, no coloring graph of the form $\mathcal{C}_{\chi(G)}(G)$ is isomorphic to a coloring graph with surplus colors. Our constructive proof provides a method to decide whether a coloring graph is generated with surplus colors, although the resulting algorithms are inefficient.

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  1. Reconstructing a graph from its Bell colouring graph

    math.CO 2026-04 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    Graphs without vertices of degree n-1 are uniquely determined by their Bell colouring graphs, which encode partitions into independent sets.