Result: Improved bounds for the zeros of the chromatic polynomial via Whitney's Broken Circuit Theorem

Title:
Improved bounds for the zeros of the chromatic polynomial via Whitney's Broken Circuit Theorem
Source:
Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B. 169:233-252
Publication Status:
Preprint
Publisher Information:
Elsevier BV, 2024.
Publication Year:
2024
Document Type:
Academic journal Article
File Description:
application/pdf
Language:
English
ISSN:
0095-8956
DOI:
10.1016/j.jctb.2024.06.005
DOI:
10.48550/arxiv.2309.10928
Rights:
CC BY
arXiv Non-Exclusive Distribution
Accession Number:
edsair.doi.dedup.....5690e45f045a02338ac2f870db1a2a9a
Database:
OpenAIRE

Further Information

We prove that for any graph $G$ of maximum degree at most $Δ$, the zeros of its chromatic polynomial $χ_G(x)$ (in $\mathbb{C}$) lie inside the disc of radius $5.94 Δ$ centered at $0$. This improves on the previously best known bound of approximately $6.91Δ$. We also obtain improved bounds for graphs of high girth. We prove that for every $g$ there is a constant $K_g$ such that for any graph $G$ of maximum degree at most $Δ$ and girth at least $g$, the zeros of its chromatic polynomial $χ_G(x)$ lie inside the disc of radius $K_g Δ$ centered at $0$, where $K_g$ is the solution to a certain optimization problem. In particular, $K_g < 5$ when $g \geq 5$ and $K_g < 4$ when $g \geq 25$ and $K_g$ tends to approximately $3.86$ as $g \to \infty$. Key to the proof is a classical theorem of Whitney which allows us to relate the chromatic polynomial of a graph $G$ to the generating function of so-called broken-circuit-free forests in $G$. We also establish a zero-free disc for the generating function of all forests in $G$ (aka the partition function of the arboreal gas) which may be of independent interest.
16 pages