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 <title>four-color theorem</title>
 <name>FourColorTheorem2</name>
 <created>2009-02-21 11:10:55</created>
 <modified>2009-02-21 11:10:55</modified>
 <type>Theorem</type>
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 <modifier id="441" name="bci1"/>
 <author id="441" name="bci1"/>
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	<term>the four-color theorem</term>
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 <content>\section{The four-color theorem}
\begin{theorem}
 Any map in a plane can be colored using four-colors in such a way that regions sharing a common boundary --that is not a single point-- do not share the same color. 
\end{theorem}


\subsection{History}
F. Guthrie, first conjectured the four color theorem in 1853. The first 
published paper on Guthrie's conjecture was not however published until 1878 by Cayley.

\subsection{Extensions}

 The Heawood conjecture is a more general proposition for map coloring, stating that in a genus $0$ space, including both the sphere or plane, four colors would suffice.

 On the other hand, for any genus $&gt; 0$, Ringel and Youngs were able to prove in a report published in 1968 the following theorem:

\begin{theorem}
The Heawood conjecture specifies the correct necessary number of colors ($4$) for any genus $0$, with the exception of the Klein bottle for which the number of colors is six (not seven colors as stated by Heawood). 

\end{theorem}</content>
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