48,305 research outputs found
Structure of Cubic Lehman Matrices
A pair of square -matrices is called a \emph{Lehman pair} if
for some integer . In this case and
are called \emph{Lehman matrices}. This terminology arises because Lehman
showed that the rows with the fewest ones in any non-degenerate minimally
nonideal (mni) matrix form a square Lehman submatrix of . Lehman
matrices with are essentially equivalent to \emph{partitionable graphs}
(also known as -graphs), so have been heavily studied as part
of attempts to directly classify minimal imperfect graphs. In this paper, we
view a Lehman matrix as the bipartite adjacency matrix of a regular bipartite
graph, focusing in particular on the case where the graph is cubic. From this
perspective, we identify two constructions that generate cubic Lehman graphs
from smaller Lehman graphs. The most prolific of these constructions involves
repeatedly replacing suitable pairs of edges with a particular -vertex
subgraph that we call a -rung ladder segment. Two decades ago, L\"{u}tolf \&
Margot initiated a computational study of mni matrices and constructed a
catalogue containing (among other things) a listing of all cubic Lehman
matrices with of order up to . We verify their catalogue
(which has just one omission), and extend the computational results to matrices. Of the cubic Lehman matrices (with ) of order
up to , only two do not arise from our -rung ladder
construction. However these exceptions can be derived from our second
construction, and so our two constructions cover all known cubic Lehman
matrices with
Drawings of Planar Graphs with Few Slopes and Segments
We study straight-line drawings of planar graphs with few segments and few
slopes. Optimal results are obtained for all trees. Tight bounds are obtained
for outerplanar graphs, 2-trees, and planar 3-trees. We prove that every
3-connected plane graph on vertices has a plane drawing with at most
segments and at most slopes. We prove that every cubic
3-connected plane graph has a plane drawing with three slopes (and three bends
on the outerface). In a companion paper, drawings of non-planar graphs with few
slopes are also considered.Comment: This paper is submitted to a journal. A preliminary version appeared
as "Really Straight Graph Drawings" in the Graph Drawing 2004 conference. See
http://arxiv.org/math/0606446 for a companion pape
On the expected number of perfect matchings in cubic planar graphs
A well-known conjecture by Lov\'asz and Plummer from the 1970s asserted that
a bridgeless cubic graph has exponentially many perfect matchings. It was
solved in the affirmative by Esperet et al. (Adv. Math. 2011). On the other
hand, Chudnovsky and Seymour (Combinatorica 2012) proved the conjecture in the
special case of cubic planar graphs. In our work we consider random bridgeless
cubic planar graphs with the uniform distribution on graphs with vertices.
Under this model we show that the expected number of perfect matchings in
labeled bridgeless cubic planar graphs is asymptotically , where
and is an explicit algebraic number. We also
compute the expected number of perfect matchings in (non necessarily
bridgeless) cubic planar graphs and provide lower bounds for unlabeled graphs.
Our starting point is a correspondence between counting perfect matchings in
rooted cubic planar maps and the partition function of the Ising model in
rooted triangulations.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
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