Vadim Georgievich Vizing (Russian: Вади́м Гео́ргиевич Визинг, Ukrainian: Вадим Георгійович Візінг; 25 March 1937 – 23 August 2017)[1] was a Soviet and Ukrainianmathematician known for his contributions to graph theory, and especially for Vizing's theorem stating that the edges of any simple graph with maximum degree Δ can be colored with at most Δ + 1 colors.
Biography
Vizing was born in Kiev on March 25, 1937.[2][3] His mother was half-German,[note 1] and because of this the Soviet authorities forced his family to move to Siberia in 1947. After completing his undergraduate studies in mathematics in Tomsk State University in 1959, he began his Ph.D. studies at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics in Moscow, on the subject of function approximation, but he left in 1962 without completing his degree.[2] Instead, he returned to Novosibirsk, working from 1962 to 1968 at the Russian Academy of Sciences there and earning a Ph.D. in 1966.[2][4] In Novosibirsk, he was a regular participant in A. A. Zykov's seminar in graph theory.[5] After holding various additional positions, he moved to Odessa in 1974, where he taught mathematics for many years at the Academy for Food Technology[2] (originally known as Одесский технологический институт пищевой промышленности им. М. В. Ломоносова, "Odessa Technological Institute of Food Industry named after Mikhail Lomonosov").
Research results
The result now known as Vizing's theorem, published in 1964, when Vizing was working in Novosibirsk, states that the edges of any graph with at most Δ edges per vertex can be colored using at most Δ + 1 colors.[V64] It is a continuation of the work of Claude Shannon, who showed that any multigraph can have its edges colored with at most (3/2)Δ colors (a tight bound, as a triangle with Δ/2 edges per side requires this many colors).[6][note 2] Although Vizing's theorem is now standard material in many graph theory textbooks, Vizing had trouble publishing the result initially, and his paper on it appears in an obscure journal, Diskret. Analiz.[note 3]
Vizing, V. G. (1974), "Reduction of the problem of isomorphism and isomorphic entrance to the task of finding the nondensity of a graph", Proc. 3rd All-Union Conf. Problems of Theoretical Cybernetics, p. 124
V76.
Vizing, V. G. (1976), "Vertex colorings with given colors", Diskret. Analiz. (in Russian), 29: 3–10
Notes
^"Vizing" may be the romanization of the phonetic transcription of the German surname Wiesing into Russian.
^The full name of this journal was Akademiya Nauk SSSR. Sibirskoe Otdelenie. Institut Matematiki. Diskretny˘ı Analiz. Sbornik Trudov. It was renamed Metody Diskretnogo Analiza in 1980 (the name given for it in Gutin & Toft (2000)) and discontinued in 1991 [1].
^In Soifer (2008), Vizing states that he formulated the conjecture in 1964, but by the time it was published in 1968 Behzad had independently posed the same conjecture.
^Soifer, Alexander (2008), The Mathematical Coloring Book, Springer-Verlag, ISBN978-0-387-74640-1. Pages 136–137 reproduce a 1995 letter from Vizing to Soifer concerning the formulation of the total coloring conjecture, that also includes some biographical detail about Vizing.
^Goldberg, Mark (1983), The development of combinatorics in the USSR: a brief historical and mathematical survey, Delphic Associates, Falls Church, VA, p. 35, MR0757359, Vizing has somewhat changed his research interests, from pure graph theory to schedule theory