Metric coloring allows adjacent vertices of a graph to share the same color provided that their associated distance vectors are distinct, leading to the concept of the metric chromatic number. This notion is closely related to problems of vertex distinguishability and resource allocation in network-like structures. In this paper, we present the first exact determination of the metric chromatic number for three families of theta type graphs: uniform theta graphs, centralized uniform theta graphs, and a newly introduced class called the cycle uniform theta graph, obtained by cyclically arranging uniform theta subgraphs. The proposed construction enables an investigation of how cyclic configurations influence metric coloring behavior. Using a constructive metric coloring approach, exact values of the metric chromatic number are obtained. It is shown that the uniform theta graph and the centralized uniform theta graph both satisfy for all positive integers and . For the cycle uniform theta graph , the metric chromatic number equals when and have the same parity or when is odd and is even. In contrast, when is even and is odd. This latter case arises because the longest path in the cyclic structure has odd length, forcing the graph to have chromatic number three. Since the graph is connected and its chromatic number is at most three, this structural constraint directly implies that three colors are also necessary for a valid metric coloring.
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