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The Hardness of 3 -Uniform Hypergraph Coloring
Vancouver, BC, Canada November 16-November 19
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/SFCS.2002.1181880The 43rd Annual IEEE Symposium on Fou ...
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Irit Dinur, Institute for Advanced Study
Oded Regev, Institute for Advanced Study
Clifford Smyth, Institute for Advanced Study

We prove that coloring a 3-uniform 2-colorable hypergraph with any constant number of colors is NP-hard. The best known algorithm [20] colors such a graph using O(n1/5) colors. Our result immediately implies that for any constants k >2 and c2 > c1 > 1, coloring a k-uniform c1-colorable hypergraph with c2 colors is NP-hard; leaving completely open only the k = 2 graph case.

We are the first to obtain a hardness result for approximately-coloring a 3-uniform hypergraph that is colorable with a constant number of colors. For k ≥ 4 such a result has been shown by [14], who also discussed the inherent difference between the k = 3 case and k ≥ 4.

Our proof presents a new connection between the Long-Code and the Kneser graph, and relies on the high chromatic numbers of the Kneser graph [19, 22] and the Schrijver graph [26]. We prove a certain maximization variant of the Kneser conjecture, namely that any coloring of the Kneser graph by fewer colors than its chromatic number, has ?many? non-monochromatic edges.

Citation:
Irit Dinur, Oded Regev, Clifford Smyth, "The Hardness of 3 -Uniform Hypergraph Coloring," focs, pp.33, The 43rd Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS'02), 2002
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