1,635 research outputs found
Colourings of cubic graphs inducing isomorphic monochromatic subgraphs
A -bisection of a bridgeless cubic graph is a -colouring of its
vertex set such that the colour classes have the same cardinality and all
connected components in the two subgraphs induced by the colour classes
(monochromatic components in what follows) have order at most . Ban and
Linial conjectured that every bridgeless cubic graph admits a -bisection
except for the Petersen graph. A similar problem for the edge set of cubic
graphs has been studied: Wormald conjectured that every cubic graph with
has a -edge colouring such that the two
monochromatic subgraphs are isomorphic linear forests (i.e. a forest whose
components are paths). Finally, Ando conjectured that every cubic graph admits
a bisection such that the two induced monochromatic subgraphs are isomorphic.
In this paper, we give a detailed insight into the conjectures of Ban-Linial
and Wormald and provide evidence of a strong relation of both of them with
Ando's conjecture. Furthermore, we also give computational and theoretical
evidence in their support. As a result, we pose some open problems stronger
than the above mentioned conjectures. Moreover, we prove Ban-Linial's
conjecture for cubic cycle permutation graphs.
As a by-product of studying -edge colourings of cubic graphs having linear
forests as monochromatic components, we also give a negative answer to a
problem posed by Jackson and Wormald about certain decompositions of cubic
graphs into linear forests.Comment: 33 pages; submitted for publicatio
Decomposition spaces in combinatorics
A decomposition space (also called unital 2-Segal space) is a simplicial object satisfying an exactness condition weaker than the Segal condition: just as the Segal condition expresses (up to homotopy) composition, the new condition expresses decomposition. It is a general framework for incidence (co)algebras. In the present contribution, after establishing a formula for the section coefficients, we survey a large supply of examples, emphasising the notion's firm roots in classical combinatorics. The first batch of examples, similar to binomial posets, serves to illustrate two key points: (1) the incidence algebra in question is realised directly from a decomposition space, without a reduction step, and reductions are often given by CULF functors; (2) at the objective level, the convolution algebra is a monoidal structure of species. Specifically, we encounter the usual Cauchy product of species, the shuffle product of L-species, the Dirichlet product of arithmetic species, the Joyal-Street external product of q-species and the Morrison `Cauchy' product of q-species, and in each case a power series representation results from taking cardinality. The external product of q-species exemplifies the fact that Waldhausen's S-construction on an abelian category is a decomposition space, yielding Hall algebras. The next class of examples includes Schmitt's chromatic Hopf algebra, the Fa\`a di Bruno bialgebra, the Butcher-Connes-Kreimer Hopf algebra of trees and several variations from operad theory. Similar structures on posets and directed graphs exemplify a general construction of decomposition spaces from directed restriction species. We finish by computing the M\Preprin
Linear rank-width of distance-hereditary graphs I. A polynomial-time algorithm
Linear rank-width is a linearized variation of rank-width, and it is deeply
related to matroid path-width. In this paper, we show that the linear
rank-width of every -vertex distance-hereditary graph, equivalently a graph
of rank-width at most , can be computed in time , and a linear layout witnessing the linear rank-width can be computed with
the same time complexity. As a corollary, we show that the path-width of every
-element matroid of branch-width at most can be computed in time
, provided that the matroid is given by an
independent set oracle.
To establish this result, we present a characterization of the linear
rank-width of distance-hereditary graphs in terms of their canonical split
decompositions. This characterization is similar to the known characterization
of the path-width of forests given by Ellis, Sudborough, and Turner [The vertex
separation and search number of a graph. Inf. Comput., 113(1):50--79, 1994].
However, different from forests, it is non-trivial to relate substructures of
the canonical split decomposition of a graph with some substructures of the
given graph. We introduce a notion of `limbs' of canonical split
decompositions, which correspond to certain vertex-minors of the original
graph, for the right characterization.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures, 2 table. A preliminary version appeared in the
proceedings of WG'1
Linear rank-width of distance-hereditary graphs II. Vertex-minor obstructions
In the companion paper [Linear rank-width of distance-hereditary graphs I. A
polynomial-time algorithm, Algorithmica 78(1):342--377, 2017], we presented a
characterization of the linear rank-width of distance-hereditary graphs, from
which we derived an algorithm to compute it in polynomial time. In this paper,
we investigate structural properties of distance-hereditary graphs based on
this characterization.
First, we prove that for a fixed tree , every distance-hereditary graph of
sufficiently large linear rank-width contains a vertex-minor isomorphic to .
We extend this property to bigger graph classes, namely, classes of graphs
whose prime induced subgraphs have bounded linear rank-width. Here, prime
graphs are graphs containing no splits. We conjecture that for every tree ,
every graph of sufficiently large linear rank-width contains a vertex-minor
isomorphic to . Our result implies that it is sufficient to prove this
conjecture for prime graphs.
For a class of graphs closed under taking vertex-minors, a graph
is called a vertex-minor obstruction for if but all of
its proper vertex-minors are contained in . Secondly, we provide, for
each , a set of distance-hereditary graphs that contains all
distance-hereditary vertex-minor obstructions for graphs of linear rank-width
at most . Also, we give a simpler way to obtain the known vertex-minor
obstructions for graphs of linear rank-width at most .Comment: 38 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, revised journal version. A preliminary
version of Section 5 appeared in the proceedings of WG1
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