Graph Theory
The Edge Coloring Problem in Graphs
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.20873/uft.2675-3588.2026.v7n2.p29-40Keywords:
Graph Coloring, Four Color Problem, Vizing Theorem, Combinatorial Optimization, ModelingAbstract
Graph theory, historically propelled by Francis Guthrie's 1852 conjecture and the eventual proof of the Four Color Theorem, has evolved from a collection of topological curiosities into a set of essential modeling tools. This work specifically targets the Edge Coloring Problem, addressing it through a lens that is both historical and rigorously formal. Initially, the text contextualizes the conceptual shift from map coloring to edge coloring, emphasizing its practical applicability in critical areas such as network optimization and scheduling. The core discussion deepens into an analysis of Vizing's Theorem, which establishes precise boundaries for the chromatic index of simple graphs, positioning it strictly between the maximum degree and the maximum degree plus one. Key lemmas and structural conditions determining whether a graph falls into Class 1 or Class 2 are dissected. By exploring the inherent complexity of this classification, this article serves as a pedagogical reference, clarifying how local adjacency constraints dictate global behavior in complex systems.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Lean de Albuquerque Pereira, Tiago Baborsa de Castro Souza, Daniel Martins da Silva, Tanilson Dias dos Santos

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