Conjecture Every complete geometric graph with an even number of vertices has a partition of its edge set into plane (i.e. non-crossing) spanning trees.
The crossing number of is the minimum number of crossings in all drawings of in the plane.
The -dimensional (hyper)cube is the graph whose vertices are all binary sequences of length , and two of the sequences are adjacent in if they differ in precisely one coordinate.
In an edge-colored digraph, we say that a subgraph is rainbow if all its edges have distinct colors, and monochromatic if all its edges have the same color.
Problem Let be a tournament with edges colored from a set of three colors. Is it true that must have either a rainbow directed cycle of length three or a vertex so that every other vertex can be reached from by a monochromatic (directed) path?
Conjecture Denote by the number of non-Hamiltonian 3-regular graphs of size , and similarly denote by the number of non-Hamiltonian 3-regular 1-connected graphs of size .
Consider a set of great circles on a sphere with no three circles meeting at a point. The arrangement graph of has a vertex for each intersection point, and an edge for each arc directly connecting two intersection points. So this arrangement graph is 4-regular and planar.
Conjecture Every arrangement graph of a set of great circles is -colourable.
Conjecture The sequence {L(n) mod m}, where L(n) are the Lucas numbers, contains a complete residue system modulo m if and only if m is one of the following: 2, 4, 6, 7, 14, 3^k, k >=1.
Let be a positive integer. We say that a graph is strongly -colorable if for every partition of the vertices to sets of size at most there is a proper -coloring of in which the vertices in each set of the partition have distinct colors.
Conjecture If is the maximal degree of a graph , then is strongly -colorable.
Conjecture If is a bridgelesscubic graph, then there exist 6 perfect matchings of with the property that every edge of is contained in exactly two of .
Problem Two players start at a distance of 2 on an (undirected) line (so, neither player knows the direction of the other) and both move at a maximum speed of 1. What is the infimum expected meeting time (first time when the players occupy the same point) which can be achieved assuming the two players must adopt the same strategy?
Conjecture Let be the disjoint union of the graphs and and let be a surface. Is it true that every optimal drawing of on has the property that and are disjoint?