Distributed -Coloring Plays Hide-and-Seek

We prove several new tight distributed lower bounds for classic symmetry breaking graph problems. As a basic tool, we first provide a new insightful proof that any deterministic distributed algorithm that computes a -coloring on -regular trees requires rounds and any randomized algorithm requires rounds. We prove this result by showing that a natural relaxation of the -coloring problem is a fixed point in the round elimination framework. As a first application, we show that our -coloring lower bound proof directly extends to arbdefective colorings. We exactly characterize which variants of the arbdefective coloring problem are "easy", and which of them instead are "hard". As a second application, which we see as our main contribution, we use the structure of the fixed point as a building block to prove lower bounds as a function of for a large class of distributed symmetry breaking problems. For example, we obtain a tight lower bound for the fundamental problem of computing a -ruling set. This is an exponential improvement over the best existing lower bound for the problem, which was proven in [FOCS '20]. Our lower bound even applies to a much more general family of problems that allows for almost arbitrary combinations of natural constraints from coloring problems, orientation problems, and independent set problems, and provides a single unified proof for known and new lower bound results for these types of problems. Our lower bounds as a function of also imply lower bounds as a function of . We obtain, for example, that maximal independent set, on trees, requires rounds for deterministic algorithms, which is tight.
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