This assignment of lists, each with length k = 3, makes it so that no matter which colors are chosen from each list for the edge's color, the graph cannot be properly colored. The graph is therefore not 3-edge-choosable, and has a list chromatic index of at least 4 (in this case, it is 4).
Unsolved problem in mathematics:
For every graph, is the list chromatic index equal to the chromatic index?

In graph theory, list edge-coloring is a type of graph coloring that combines list coloring and edge coloring. An instance of a list edge-coloring problem consists of a graph together with a list of allowed colors for each edge. A list edge-coloring is a choice of a color for each edge, from its list of allowed colors; a coloring is proper if no two adjacent edges receive the same color.

A graph G is k-edge-choosable if every instance of list edge-coloring that has G as its underlying graph and that provides at least k allowed colors for each edge of G has a proper coloring. In other words, when the list for each edge has length k, no matter which colors are put in each list, a color can be selected from each list so that G is properly colored. The edge choosability, or list edge colorability, list edge chromatic number, or list chromatic index, ch'(G) of graph G is the least number k such that G is k-edge-choosable. It is conjectured that it always equals the chromatic index.

Properties

Some properties of ch'(G):

  1. This is the Dinitz conjecture, proven by Galvin (1995).
  2. i.e. the list chromatic index and the chromatic index agree asymptotically (Kahn 2000).

Here χ(G) is the chromatic index of G; and Kn,n, the complete bipartite graph with equal partite sets.

List coloring conjecture

The most famous open problem about list edge-coloring is probably the list coloring conjecture.

This conjecture has a fuzzy origin; Jensen & Toft (1995) overview its history. The Dinitz conjecture, proven by Galvin (1995), is the special case of the list coloring conjecture for the complete bipartite graphs Kn,n.

References

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