2,486 research outputs found

    Induced minors and well-quasi-ordering

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    A graph HH is an induced minor of a graph GG if it can be obtained from an induced subgraph of GG by contracting edges. Otherwise, GG is said to be HH-induced minor-free. Robin Thomas showed that K4K_4-induced minor-free graphs are well-quasi-ordered by induced minors [Graphs without K4K_4 and well-quasi-ordering, Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 38(3):240 -- 247, 1985]. We provide a dichotomy theorem for HH-induced minor-free graphs and show that the class of HH-induced minor-free graphs is well-quasi-ordered by the induced minor relation if and only if HH is an induced minor of the gem (the path on 4 vertices plus a dominating vertex) or of the graph obtained by adding a vertex of degree 2 to the complete graph on 4 vertices. To this end we proved two decomposition theorems which are of independent interest. Similar dichotomy results were previously given for subgraphs by Guoli Ding in [Subgraphs and well-quasi-ordering, Journal of Graph Theory, 16(5):489--502, 1992] and for induced subgraphs by Peter Damaschke in [Induced subgraphs and well-quasi-ordering, Journal of Graph Theory, 14(4):427--435, 1990]

    Induced minors and well-quasi-ordering

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    International audienceA graph H is an induced minor of a graph G if it can be obtained from an induced subgraph of G by contracting edges. Otherwise, G is said to be H-induced minor-free. Robin Thomas showed in [Graphs without K 4 and well-quasi-ordering, Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 38(3):240 – 247, 1985] that K 4-induced minor-free graphs are well-quasi ordered by induced minors. We provide a dichotomy theorem for H-induced minor-free graphs and show that the class of H-induced minor-free graphs is well-quasi-ordered by the induced minor relation if and only if H is an induced minor of the gem (the path on 4 vertices plus a dominating vertex) or of the graph obtained by adding a vertex of degree 2 to the complete graph on 4 vertices.Similar dichotomy results were previously given by Guoli Ding in [Subgraphs and well-quasi-ordering, Journal of Graph Theory, 16(5):489–502, 1992] for subgraphs and Peter Damaschke in [Induced subgraphs and well-quasi-ordering, Journal of Graph Theory, 14(4):427–435, 1990] for induced subgraphs

    Well-quasi-ordering and finite distinguishing number

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    Balogh, Bollobás and Weinreich showed that a parameter that has since been termed the distinguishing number can be used to identify a jump in the possible speeds of hereditary classes of graphs at the sequence of Bell numbers. We prove that every hereditary class that lies above the Bell numbers and has finite distinguishing number contains a boundary class for well‐quasi‐ordering. This means that any such hereditary class which in addition is defined by finitely many minimal forbidden induced subgraphs must contain an infinite antichain. As all hereditary classes below the Bell numbers are well‐quasi‐ordered, our results complete the answer to the question of well‐quasi‐ordering for hereditary classes with finite distinguishing number. We also show that the decision procedure of Atminas, Collins, Foniok and Lozin to decide the Bell number (and which now also decides well‐quasi‐ordering for classes of finite distinguishing number) has runtime bounded by an explicit (quadruple exponential) function of the order of the largest minimal forbidden induced subgraph of the class

    Minimal classes of graphs of unbounded clique-width defined by finitely many forbidden induced subgraphs

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    We discover new hereditary classes of graphs that are minimal (with respect to set inclusion) of unbounded clique-width. The new examples include split permutation graphs and bichain graphs. Each of these classes is characterised by a finite list of minimal forbidden induced subgraphs. These, therefore, disprove a conjecture due to Daligault, Rao and Thomasse from 2010 claiming that all such minimal classes must be defined by infinitely many forbidden induced subgraphs. In the same paper, Daligault, Rao and Thomasse make another conjecture that every hereditary class of unbounded clique-width must contain a labelled infinite antichain. We show that the two example classes we consider here satisfy this conjecture. Indeed, they each contain a canonical labelled infinite antichain, which leads us to propose a stronger conjecture: that every hereditary class of graphs that is minimal of unbounded clique-width contains a canonical labelled infinite antichain.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure

    Multigraphs without large bonds are wqo by contraction

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    We show that the class of multigraphs with at most pp connected components and bonds of size at most kk is well-quasi-ordered by edge contraction for all positive integers p,kp,k. (A bond is a minimal non-empty edge cut.) We also characterize canonical antichains for this relation and show that they are fundamental

    Canonizing Graphs of Bounded Tree Width in Logspace

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    Graph canonization is the problem of computing a unique representative, a canon, from the isomorphism class of a given graph. This implies that two graphs are isomorphic exactly if their canons are equal. We show that graphs of bounded tree width can be canonized by logarithmic-space (logspace) algorithms. This implies that the isomorphism problem for graphs of bounded tree width can be decided in logspace. In the light of isomorphism for trees being hard for the complexity class logspace, this makes the ubiquitous class of graphs of bounded tree width one of the few classes of graphs for which the complexity of the isomorphism problem has been exactly determined.Comment: 26 page

    On the threshold-width of graphs

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    The GG-width of a class of graphs GG is defined as follows. A graph G has GG-width k if there are k independent sets N1,...,Nk in G such that G can be embedded into a graph H in GG such that for every edge e in H which is not an edge in G, there exists an i such that both endpoints of e are in Ni. For the class TH of threshold graphs we show that TH-width is NP-complete and we present fixed-parameter algorithms. We also show that for each k, graphs of TH-width at most k are characterized by a finite collection of forbidden induced subgraphs

    Letter graphs and geometric grid classes of permutations: characterization and recognition

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    In this paper, we reveal an intriguing relationship between two seemingly unrelated notions: letter graphs and geometric grid classes of permutations. An important property common for both of them is well-quasi-orderability, implying, in a non-constructive way, a polynomial-time recognition of geometric grid classes of permutations and kk-letter graphs for a fixed kk. However, constructive algorithms are available only for k=2k=2. In this paper, we present the first constructive polynomial-time algorithm for the recognition of 33-letter graphs. It is based on a structural characterization of graphs in this class.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1108.6319 by other author
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