Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Let G be an undirected simple graph. Graph coloring is a special case of labeling, and G is said to admit a proper coloring if no two neighbouring vertices of it are given the identical color. The vertices of identical color constitute a color class. A graph is p-colorable if it has a p-coloring. The chromatic number of G, denoted by χ(G), is the minimum p such that G is p-colorable. A graph G is equitably p-colorable if it has a p-coloring and the absolute difference in size between any two distinct color classes is at most 1. The equitable chromatic number of G, denoted by χ=(G), is the minimum p such that G is equitably p-colorable. The equitable chromatic threshold of G, denoted by , is the minimum p ′ such that G is equitably p-colorable for all p ≥ p ′ . A windmill graph Wnm consists of m copies of the complete graph Kn, with every vertex connected to a common vertex. In this paper, we give exact values of χ=(G) and when G is a windmill graph, bistar windmill graph, cycle windmill graph, and complete windmill graph.
Elumalai et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: