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Four color theorem
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===Higher surfaces=== One can also consider the coloring problem on surfaces other than the plane.{{sfnp|Ringel|1974}} The problem on the [[sphere]] or [[cylinder]] is equivalent to that on the plane. For closed (orientable or non-orientable) surfaces with positive [[genus (mathematics)|genus]], the maximum number ''p'' of colors needed depends on the surface's [[Euler characteristic]] χ according to the formula : <math>p=\left\lfloor\frac{7 + \sqrt{49 - 24 \chi}}{2}\right\rfloor,</math> where the outermost brackets denote the [[floor function]]. Alternatively, for an [[orientable]] surface the formula can be given in terms of the genus of a surface, ''g'': :: <math>p=\left\lfloor\frac{7 + \sqrt{1 + 48g }}{2}\right\rfloor.</math> This formula, the [[Heawood conjecture]], was proposed by [[P. J. Heawood]] in 1890 and, after contributions by several people, proved by [[Gerhard Ringel]] and [[John William Theodore Youngs|J. W. T. Youngs]] in 1968. The only exception to the formula is the [[Klein bottle]], which has Euler characteristic 0 (hence the formula gives p = 7) but requires only 6 colors, as shown by [[Philip Franklin]] in 1934. For example, the [[torus]] has Euler characteristic χ = 0 (and genus ''g'' = 1) and thus ''p'' = 7, so no more than 7 colors are required to color any map on a torus. This upper bound of 7 is [[Glossary of mathematical jargon#sharp|sharp]]: certain [[toroidal polyhedron|toroidal polyhedra]] such as the [[Szilassi polyhedron]] require seven colors. A [[Möbius strip]] requires six colors {{harv|Tietze|1910}} as do [[1-planar graph]]s (graphs drawn with at most one simple crossing per edge) {{harv|Borodin|1984}}. If both the vertices and the faces of a planar graph are colored, in such a way that no two adjacent vertices, faces, or vertex-face pair have the same color, then again at most six colors are needed {{harv|Borodin|1984}}. <gallery widths="200" heights="200"> 7 colour torus.svg|A radially symmetric 7-colored torus – regions of the same colour wrap around along dotted lines Tietze genus 2 colouring.svg|An 8-coloured double torus (genus-two surface) – bubbles denote unique combination of two regions Taxel_genus_3_colouring.svg|A 9-coloured triple torus (genus-three surface) – blobs denote ends of their respective tunnels Klein bottle colouring.svg|A 6-colored [[Klein bottle]] Tietze Moebius.svg|[[Heinrich Tietze|Tietze's]] subdivision of a [[Möbius strip]] into six mutually adjacent regions, requiring six colors. The vertices and edges of the subdivision form an embedding of [[Tietze's graph]] onto the strip. Szilassi polyhedron 3D model.svg|Interactive [[Szilassi polyhedron]] model with each of 7 faces adjacent to every other – in [[Media:Szilassi polyhedron 3D model.svg|the SVG image]], move the mouse to rotate it </gallery> For graphs whose vertices are represented as pairs of points on two distinct surfaces, with edges drawn as non-crossing curves on one of the two surfaces, the chromatic number can be at least 9 and is at most 12, but more precise bounds are not known; this is [[Gerhard Ringel]]'s [[Earth–Moon problem]].<ref>{{citation | last = Gethner | first = Ellen | author-link = Ellen Gethner | editor1-last = Gera | editor1-first = Ralucca | editor1-link = Ralucca Gera | editor2-last = Haynes | editor2-first = Teresa W. | editor2-link = Teresa W. Haynes | editor3-last = Hedetniemi | editor3-first = Stephen T. | contribution = To the Moon and beyond | doi = 10.1007/978-3-319-97686-0_11 | mr = 3930641 | pages = 115–133 | publisher = Springer International Publishing | series = Problem Books in Mathematics | title = Graph Theory: Favorite Conjectures and Open Problems, II | year = 2018| isbn = 978-3-319-97684-6 }}</ref>
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