1. Introduction
A
hypergraph of order
v is a pair
, where
X is a
v-set and
is a family of subsets of
X such that the following is true (see [
1,
2,
3]):
- (1)
, for every , I set of indices;
- (2)
.
The elements of
are called the
vertices of
. The elements of
are called the
edges of
. A
hypergraph is said
uniform of rank k, if
for every
(see [
1,
2,
3]). If
, the
degree of
Y is the number of edges of
containing
Y (see [
2]).
If is a hypergraph, a colouring of is a mapping , where is a set of colours, such that
The chromatic number of is defined as the minimum number of colours needed to define a colouring of . A strong colouring of is a mapping , such that
The strong chromatic number of is defined as the minimum number of colours needed to define a strong colouring of .
In any type of colouring defined in a hypergraph , a colouring class of is a set of all the vertices to which the same colour is assigned. Clearly, the family of all the colouring classes is a partition of the X.
In 1992, V. Voloshin introduced the concept of a
mixed hypergraph (see [
4,
5] and also [
6,
7,
8,
9]), giving new directions for research in the colourings of hypergraphs.
The field of mixed hypergraphs is a well-established subarea of combinatorics and graph theory that has been actively studied since at least the early 1990s with the foundational work of Vitaly Voloshin. Since then, hundreds of research articles, surveys, and related publications have appeared in journals, conferences, proceedings, and monographs.
The following definitions were all given by V. Voloshin.
- (1)
“A mixed hypergraph is a triple , where X is a finite nonempty set and are two families of nonempty subsets of X called C-edge and D-edges respectively. The elements of X are the vertices. If , is a D-hypergraph (D-type hypergraph). If , is a C-hypergraph (C-type hypergraph). If , then is a bihypergraph”.
- (2)
A
k-colouring of a mixed hypergraph
is a mapping
such that
- (3)
A mixed hypergraph is k-colourable if there exists a k-colouring of , using at most k colours. A mixed hypergraph is uncolourable if it does not admit any colouring. A strict k-colourings is a proper colouring using exactly k colours.
- (4)
The minimum number of colours in a colouring of is called the lower chromatic number of and is denoted by . The maximum number of colours in a colouring of is called the upper chromatic number of and is denoted by .
If are positive integers, , , then denotes the number of colouring classes which partition X, such that the colouring constraint is satisfied on each C-edge and on each D-edge. Exactly, is the number of different k-colourings of , ignoring permutations of colours.
- (5)
The vector is called the chromatic spectrum of .
- (6)
The set of values k such that has a strict k-colouring is called the feasible set of , denoted by . In other words, is the set of indices k such that .
- (7)
A mixed hypergraph has a gap at k if contains values which are larger and smaller than k, but omits k. The chromatic spectrum is called continuous or gap free if has no gaps. Otherwise, it is called broken.
A Steiner system
is a pair
, where
X is a
v-set and
is a family of
k-subsets of
X such that every
h-subset of
X is contained in exactly one member of
[
2,
10,
11]. From definition it follows that
,
. Observe that using hypergraph theory terminology, a Steiner system is a hypergraph
of order
v, uniform of rank
k, such that every
h-subset
Y of
X has degree
[
2]. In Design Theory the edges of
are also called
blocks. A Steiner Triple System (STS) is a system
, and an
exists if and only if
or 3, mod 6. A system
is the
complete graph .
In a Steiner system , a parallel class is a set of blocks that partition X. is called resolvable if can be partitioned into parallel classes and the partition is called resolution. A resolvable is also known as a Kirkman Triple System of order v, or . A exists if and only if mod 6. A system is the complete graph . A parallel class in an is called factor and a resolution is a factorisation.
In the literature there are many constructions to obtain an , starting from a given . Among them, there is the well-known construction, indicated by , which gives an starting from an . There are other constructions of type .
It is also possible to consider as mixed hypergraphs, considering some blocks as C-edges and the others as D-edges.
There are very interesting problems when we consider in which the blocks are both C-edges and D-edges. Until today, such a system has been called Bi-Steiner Triple Systems and has been denoted by . From now on we will call these system Voloshin Triple Systems, giving them the name of their originator.
A
Voloshin Triple System of order
v [
] is a Steiner Triple System
, where
X is the set of vertices,
the set of blocks, and
is a vertex colouring of
such that
in other words,
Consequently, the lower chromatic number and the upper chromatic number of are defined.
Voloshin Triple Systems, as they are described in this article, are very significant relative to the classical
s, because they have exceptional combinatorial properties. For example, consider the following important sentence:
In this paper we examine
s, as
bicolourings of
considered as mixed hypegraphs, and in particular, we consider the so-called
extended colourings, for which interesting results can be found in [
12,
13,
14,
15].
2. Construction v ⟶ 2v + 1
It is well-known that it is always possible to construct an
starting from an
[
2,
10,
11].
Theorem 1. If is an , then there exists an embedding Σ.
Proof. Let be an STS(v) defined on .
- -
be a set of cardinality (even number) such that ;
- -
be a factorisation of the complete graph defined in Y;
- -
be any bijection from X into .
Define the hypergraph as follows: , , where
It can be verified that
is an
(see [
2,
10,
11]). □
3. Results About VTS
Regarding
(or
), the following results have been proved in [
16].
Theorem 2. Let be a of order v.
- (1)
There exists in Σ exactly one colouring class having odd cardinality;
- (2)
If , then ;
- (3)
If and , then and the colouring classes has cardinality: ;
- (4)
If , Σ is obtained from a by repeated constructions .
Further, the following characterisation is proved in [
15]:
Theorem 3. Let be a of order v. It is if and only if Σ is obtained from a by repeated constructions .
4. Some Results and Two Conjectures
Following the results of the previous section, in [
16], using computer-assisted search, the following was proved:
Theorem 4. If is a of order , obtained by a sequence of constructions, starting from a , then , for every .
The following result proves that the situation described in the previous Theorem does not always occur [
17].
Theorem 5. A is colourable only if it can be obtained by a sequence starting from and it is: .
Many other important results have been found by the authors in [
17]. We cite some of them.
Theorem 6. - (1)
If a is colourable, it can be coloured only by one of the colourings with a colouring class of size ;
- (2)
There exist having , having , having and , and uncolourable;
- (3)
The smallest order for which there exists a with is .
After these results, we have formulated the following two conjectures [
18], subject of a main lecture in the conference
International Symposium on Graphs, Designs and Application, Messina, 30 September–4 October 2003. These conjectures are very difficult to prove or disprove, and they go further in deep exploration of the structure of VTSs.
- (1)
Conjecture [M. Gionfriddo 2002]:
For all of order , obtained by a sequence of , starting from a , it is:
- (2)
Conjecture [M. Gionfriddo 2003]:
All colourable do not have a broken chromatic spectrum.
Observe that in Conjecture 2002, the initial system is a , which has only one block, necessarily colourable with two colours: one associated with one vertex and one associated with the remaining two vertices. Therefore, if , and the cardinality colouring classes are .
If
, the
is obtained by a system
having only a block
, a factorisation
, where
, and associating
with
(this does not harm the generality) provides the following blocks:
It can be verified that, necessarily, this
can be coloured only giving a colour
C, different from
, to all the vertices
. It follows that
Similarly, it can be verified that
The Conjecture 2002 states that
5. Some Particular Cases
It is clear that the system obtained by the construction
overall depends on the choice of the factorisation defined in
Y,
. We see a case where this choice allows us to construct systems that verify Conjecture 2002. In what follows, given a vertex
x, the symbolism
will mean that the colour
A is assigned to the vertex
x, while
will mean that the vertex
x can be coloured only by
A or by
B, and finally,
will mean that all the vertices
can be coloured only by
A. Following the symbolism and terminology of
Section 2, consider the construction
, where
- (1)
CASE v = 3:
- -
, ;
- -
is a of order , where ;
- -
f is a vertex colouring defined in such that , where are colours;
- -
is a factorisation defined in Y;
- -
is a bijection such that for every ;
- -
is a obtained by construction .
It follows that
Theorem 7. If is a factorisation defined on Y as follows:then =
and the colouring classes have cardinality Proof. The vertices of the only block of
have colours
The blocks of
are
and
Note that it is not possible to colour two distinct vertices of Y with two different colours , such that . Therefore, if we define an extension of the colouring f to by setting (C colour different from ), then we have a colouring of with three colours. Hence, and the three colouring classes have the cardinality .
Now, we see that it is not possible to colour the vertices of Y using only the colours .
Indeed, suppose that . Necessarily, a pair is coloured by . Let , . Therefore, from it is , and from it is . But this implies , with a monochromatic block. Therefore, .
Now, we see that, in any case, the colouring classes have cardinality .
Let 1 be a vertex of Y of colour C. From , respectively, it follows , , . Therefore,
- (1)
If , then from it is and from . Finally, .
- (2)
If , then or , and in both cases the colouring classes have cardinality .
□
- (2)
CASE v = 7:
- -
, ;
- -
is a of order ;
- -
f is a vertex colouring defined in X such that ;
- -
is a factorisation defined in Y;
- -
is a bijection such that for every ;
- -
is the obtained by construction .
Theorem 8. If is a factorisation on Y defined as follows:and then Proof. First of all, observe that it is not possible that two vertices of Y can be coloured by two distinct colours such that . Indeed, if , , the block [where ] would have three vertices with three distinct colours.
Therefore, since it is possible to colour all the vertices of Y by a new colour D, it follows that .
Now, suppose that . If are the colouring classes in Y, associated, respectively, with the colours , then .
Indeed, if for some it were , there would be a factor with , containing a pair of vertices both coloured with U. But this is not possible due to the existence of the monochromatic block .
- (1)
Let . Necessarily, since all the pair of vertices both coloured by C are contained in , it can be only or . Without loss of generality, we can suppose that and , and, since at least a vertex must be coloured by A (or by B), let (or B).
This implies , otherwise . Hence, from the existence of the blocks , it follows that, respectively, . But this is not possible due the existence of the monochromatic block .
- (2)
Let . To avoid monochromatic blocks with vertices all coloured by C, without loss of generality we suppose . This from implies and from (or ) implies . But this is not possible.
- (3)
Let . Similarly to the previous cases, we can suppose that the two vertices coloured by C belong to . If , then from it follows that and from it follows that , and this is not possible. If , then from and it follows that . Hence, from : . But this implies the existence of the following monochromatic blocks , and this is not acceptable.
- (4)
Let . Suppose . From , it follows immediately that . Further, from it follows that . But the existence of the pair implies that the block contains three vertices coloured with .
- (5)
Let . This implies (considering the factors) that . From it follows that and from and it follows that . But this means that the block is monochromatic, with all the vertices coloured by A.
From (1), (2), (3), (4), (5) it follows that . □
6. New Open Problems
In this last section we consider an
, in which it is defined a vertex-colouring
such that
in other words, every block is bicoloured, with three vertices having the same colour.
It is well-known, for
, the following construction
(see [
2]).
Observe that if or 4 mod 12, then mod 6, and then there exist .
Theorem 9. If is an , then there exists an embedding Σ.
Proof. Let be an defined on .
Further, let
- -
be a set of cardinality such that ;
- -
be a , where is a resolution of ;
- -
be any bijection from X into .
If is a hypergraph defined as follows:
- -
;
- -
, where
then it is possible to verify that
is an
(see [
2]). □
Open Problems:
- (1)
Determine the lower chromatic number and the upper chromatic number of , starting for and for systems obtained by the construction .
- (2)
Determine the lower chromatic number and the upper chromatic number of .