Improper coloring of graphs on surfaces

2016 
A graph $G$ is $(d_1,\ldots,d_k)$-colorable if its vertex set can be partitioned into $k$ sets $V_1,\ldots,V_k$, such that for each $i\in\{1, \ldots, k\}$, the subgraph of $G$ induced by $V_i$ has maximum degree at most $d_i$. The Four Color Theorem states that every planar graph is $(0,0,0,0)$-colorable, and a classical result of Cowen, Cowen, and Woodall shows that every planar graph is $(2,2,2)$-colorable. In this paper, we extend both of these results to graphs on surfaces. Namely, we show that every graph embeddable on a surface of Euler genus $g>0$ is $(0,0,0,9g-4)$-colorable and $(2,2,9g-4)$-colorable. Moreover, these graphs are also $(0,0,O(\sqrt{g}),O(\sqrt{g}))$-colorable and $(2,O(\sqrt{g}),O(\sqrt{g}))$-colorable. We also prove that every triangle-free graph that is embeddable on a surface of Euler genus $g$ is $(0, 0, O(g))$-colorable. This is an extension of Gr\"{o}tzsch's Theorem, which states that triangle-free planar graphs are $(0, 0, 0)$-colorable. Finally, we prove that every graph of girth at least 7 that is embeddable on a surface of Euler genus $g$ is $(0,O(\sqrt{g}))$-colorable. All these results are best possible in several ways as the girth condition is sharp, the constant maximum degrees cannot be improved, and the bounds on the maximum degrees depending on $g$ are tight up to a constant multiplicative factor.
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