Title of article
The Strong Perfect Graph Conjecture: 40 years of attempts, and its resolution
Author/Authors
Roussel، نويسنده , , F. and Rusu، نويسنده , , I. and Thuillier، نويسنده , , H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
22
From page
6092
To page
6113
Abstract
The Strong Perfect Graph Conjecture (SPGC) was certainly one of the most challenging conjectures in graph theory. During more than four decades, numerous attempts were made to solve it, by combinatorial methods, by linear algebraic methods, or by polyhedral methods. The first of these three approaches yielded the first (and to date only) proof of the SPGC; the other two remain promising to consider in attempting an alternative proof.
aper is an unbalanced survey of the attempts to solve the SPGC; unbalanced, because (1) we devote a significant part of it to the ‘primitive graphs and structural faults’ paradigm which led to the Strong Perfect Graph Theorem (SPGT); (2) we briefly present the other “direct” attempts, that is, those for which results exist showing one (possible) way to the proof; (3) we ignore entirely the “indirect” approaches whose aim was to get more information about the properties and structure of perfect graphs, without a direct impact on the SPGC.
m in this paper is to trace the path that led to the proof of the SPGT as completely as possible. Of course, this implies large overlaps with the recent book on perfect graphs [J.L. Ramirez-Alfonsin, B.A. Reed (Eds.), Perfect Graphs, Wiley & Sons, 2001], but it also implies a deeper analysis (with additional results) and another viewpoint on the topic.
Keywords
Perfect graphs , Partitionable graphs , Decomposition theorems
Journal title
Discrete Mathematics
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Discrete Mathematics
Record number
1599158
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