In graph theory the road coloring theorem, known previously as the road coloring conjecture, deals with synchronized instructions. The issue involves whether by using such instructions, one can reach or locate an object or destination from any other point within a network (which might be a representation of city streets or a maze).[1] In the real world, this phenomenon would be as if you called a friend to ask for directions to his house, and he gave you a set of directions that worked no matter where you started from. This theorem also has implications in symbolic dynamics.
The theorem was first conjectured by Roy Adler and Benjamin Weiss.[2] It was proved by Avraham Trahtman.[3]
Example and intuition
The image to the right shows a directed graph on eight vertices in which each vertex has out-degree 2. (Each vertex in this case also has in-degree 2, but that is not necessary for a synchronizing coloring to exist.) The edges of this graph have been colored red and blue to create a synchronizing coloring.
For example, consider the vertex marked in yellow. No matter where in the graph you start, if you traverse all nine edges in the walk "blue-red-red—blue-red-red—blue-red-red", you will end up at the yellow vertex. Similarly, if you traverse all nine edges in the walk "blue-blue-red—blue-blue-red—blue-blue-red", you will always end up at the vertex marked in green, no matter where you started.
The road coloring theorem states that for a certain category of directed graphs, it is always possible to create such a coloring.
Mathematical description
Let G be a finite, strongly connected, directed graph where all the vertices have the same out-degree k. Let A be the alphabet containing the letters 1, ..., k. A synchronizing coloring (also known as a collapsible coloring) in G is a labeling of the edges in G with letters from A such that (1) each vertex has exactly one outgoing edge with a given label and (2) for every vertex v in the graph, there exists a word w over A such that all paths in G corresponding to w terminate at v.
The terminology synchronizing coloring is due to the relation between this notion and that of a synchronizing word in finite automata theory.
For such a coloring to exist at all, it is necessary that G be aperiodic.[4] The road coloring theorem states that aperiodicity is also sufficient for such a coloring to exist. Therefore, the road coloring problem can be stated briefly as:
- Every finite strongly connected aperiodic graph of uniform out-degree has a synchronizing coloring.
Previous partial results
Previous partial or special-case results include the following:
- If G is a finite strongly connected aperiodic directed graph with no multiple edges, and G contains a simple cycle of prime length which is a proper subset of G, then G has a synchronizing coloring.[5]
- If G is a finite strongly connected aperiodic directed graph (multiple edges allowed) and every vertex has the same in-degree and out-degree k, then G has a synchronizing coloring.[6]
See also
Notes
- ^ Seigel-Itzkovich, Judy (2008-02-08). "Russian immigrant solves math puzzle". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2024-11-01.
- ^ Adler & Weiss 1970.
- ^ Trahtman 2009.
- ^ Hegde & Jain 2005.
- ^ O'Brien 1981.
- ^ Kari 2003.
References
- Adler, Roy L.; Weiss, Benjamin (1970), Similarity of automorphisms of the torus, Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 98, doi:10.1090/memo/0098.
- Hegde, Rajneesh; Jain, Kamal (2005), "A min-max theorem about the road coloring conjecture", Proc. EuroComb 2005 (PDF), Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science, pp. 279–284.
- Kari, Jarkko (2003), "Synchronizing finite automata on Eulerian digraphs", Theoretical Computer Science, 295 (1–3): 223–232, doi:10.1016/S0304-3975(02)00405-X.
- O'Brien, G. L. (1981), "The road-colouring problem", Israel Journal of Mathematics, 39 (1–2): 145–154, doi:10.1007/BF02762860.
- Trahtman, Avraham N. (2009), "The road coloring problem", Israel Journal of Mathematics, 172 (1): 51–60, arXiv:0709.0099, doi:10.1007/s11856-009-0062-5.