What can be said about the rate of growth of f(n), defined by f(n)=min/(|V(G)|=n) [χ(G)+χ(bar G)], where the minimum is taken over all graphs G on n vertices.

wstecznyg5

wstecznyg5

Answered question

2022-07-21

chromatic number of a graph versus its complement
What can be said about the rate of growth of f(n), defined by
f ( n ) = min | V ( G ) | = n [ χ ( G ) + χ ( G ¯ ) ] ,
where the minimum is taken over all graphs G on n vertices.
Two observations.
(1) Either G or G ¯ contains a clique on roughly logn vertices by Ramsey theory, so f ( n ) c 1 log n for some constant c 1 > 0.
(2) If G=G(n,1/2) is a random graph, then χ ( G ) χ ( G ¯ ) n / log n n/ log n almost surely, so we also have f ( n ) c 2 n / log n n/log n for some constant c 2 > 0.
These bounds seem hopelessly far apart.
Can we improve on the bounds
c 1 log n f ( n ) c 2 n / log n
for all sufficiently large n?

Answer & Explanation

frisiao

frisiao

Beginner2022-07-22Added 13 answers

(Answering for posterity, don't select this as best.)
First, extend @ccc's proof to show that if p q n then f ( n ) p + q. You do this first by taking a graph on n nodes consisting of (at most) p cliques of at most q nodes each, and noting that χ ( G ) p and χ ( G ¯ ) q
Now, as shown by ccc in coments above,
2 n f ( n ) 2 n
This reduces to at most two values.
In general, if 2 x < 2 x , then the fractional part of x is in ( 0 , 1 2 ). So we only need to consider the cases where the fractional part of n is in this range, that is, n = p + δwhere p is an integer and 0 < δ < 1 2 .
Claim: p ( p + 1 ) n.
We know that p ( p + 1 ) n. Since n and p(p+1) are integers, this means p ( p + 1 ) n
Therefore, f ( n ) 2 p + 1 = 2 n
So we know that f ( n ) is always 2 n
Marisol Rivers

Marisol Rivers

Beginner2022-07-23Added 4 answers

Although there is already an accepted answer, I answer to give a bit more information, for what I have to say would not fit in a comment.
This is the Nordhaus-Gaddum Theorem:
If G is a graph of order n, then
2 n χ ( G ) + χ ( G ¯ ) n + 1
n χ ( G ) χ ( G ¯ ) ( n + 1 2 ) 2
And, there is no possible improvement of any of these bounds. In fact, much more can be said:
Let n be a positive integer. For every two positive integers a and b such that
2 n a + b n + 1
n a b ( n + 1 2 ) 2
there is a graph G of order n such that χ(G)=a and p q n.
Source: Graphs & Digraphs (Fifth edition) by Chartrand, Lesniak, and Zhang

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