1,773 research outputs found

    Unavoidable parallel minors of regular matroids

    Get PDF
    This is the post-print version of the Article - Copyright @ 2011 ElsevierWe prove that, for each positive integer k, every sufficiently large 3-connected regular matroid has a parallel minor isomorphic to M (K_{3,k}), M(W_k), M(K_k), the cycle matroid of the graph obtained from K_{2,k} by adding paths through the vertices of each vertex class, or the cycle matroid of the graph obtained from K_{3,k} by adding a complete graph on the vertex class with three vertices.This study is partially supported by a grant from the National Security Agency

    Fork-decompositions of matroids

    Get PDF
    For the abstract of this paper, please see the PDF file

    Splitters and Decomposers for Binary Matroids

    Full text link
    Let EX[M1,Mk]EX[M_1\dots, M_k] denote the class of binary matroids with no minors isomorphic to M1,,MkM_1, \dots, M_k. In this paper we give a decomposition theorem for EX[S10,S10]EX[S_{10}, S_{10}^*], where S10S_{10} is a certain 10-element rank-4 matroid. As corollaries we obtain decomposition theorems for the classes obtained by excluding the Kuratowski graphs EX[M(K3,3),M(K3,3),M(K5),M(K5)]EX[M(K_{3,3}), M^*(K_{3,3}), M(K_5), M^*(K_5)] and EX[M(K3,3),M(K3,3)]EX[M(K_{3,3}), M^*(K_{3,3})]. These decomposition theorems imply results on internally 44-connected matroids by Zhou [\ref{Zhou2004}], Qin and Zhou [\ref{Qin2004}], and Mayhew, Royle and Whitte [\ref{Mayhewsubmitted}].Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1403.775

    Comparing Perfect and 2nd Voronoi decompositions: the matroidal locus

    Full text link
    We compare two rational polyhedral admissible decompositions of the cone of positive definite quadratic forms: the perfect cone decomposition and the 2nd Voronoi decomposition. We determine which cones belong to both the decompositions, thus providing a positive answer to a conjecture of V. Alexeev and A. Brunyate. As an application, we compare the two associated toroidal compactifications of the moduli space of principal polarized abelian varieties: the perfect cone compactification and the 2nd Voronoi compactification.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figures, final version, to appear in Mathematische Annale

    Many 2-level polytopes from matroids

    Get PDF
    The family of 2-level matroids, that is, matroids whose base polytope is 2-level, has been recently studied and characterized by means of combinatorial properties. 2-level matroids generalize series-parallel graphs, which have been already successfully analyzed from the enumerative perspective. We bring to light some structural properties of 2-level matroids and exploit them for enumerative purposes. Moreover, the counting results are used to show that the number of combinatorially non-equivalent (n-1)-dimensional 2-level polytopes is bounded from below by cn5/2ρnc \cdot n^{-5/2} \cdot \rho^{-n}, where c0.03791727c\approx 0.03791727 and ρ14.88052854\rho^{-1} \approx 4.88052854.Comment: revised version, 19 pages, 7 figure

    Branch-depth: Generalizing tree-depth of graphs

    Get PDF
    We present a concept called the branch-depth of a connectivity function, that generalizes the tree-depth of graphs. Then we prove two theorems showing that this concept aligns closely with the notions of tree-depth and shrub-depth of graphs as follows. For a graph G=(V,E)G = (V,E) and a subset AA of EE we let λG(A)\lambda_G (A) be the number of vertices incident with an edge in AA and an edge in EAE \setminus A. For a subset XX of VV, let ρG(X)\rho_G(X) be the rank of the adjacency matrix between XX and VXV \setminus X over the binary field. We prove that a class of graphs has bounded tree-depth if and only if the corresponding class of functions λG\lambda_G has bounded branch-depth and similarly a class of graphs has bounded shrub-depth if and only if the corresponding class of functions ρG\rho_G has bounded branch-depth, which we call the rank-depth of graphs. Furthermore we investigate various potential generalizations of tree-depth to matroids and prove that matroids representable over a fixed finite field having no large circuits are well-quasi-ordered by the restriction.Comment: 34 pages, 2 figure
    corecore