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    On semi-transitive orientability of Kneser graphs and their complements

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    An orientation of a graph is semi-transitive if it is acyclic, and for any directed path v0β†’v1β†’β‹―β†’vkv_0\rightarrow v_1\rightarrow \cdots\rightarrow v_k either there is no edge between v0v_0 and vkv_k, or viβ†’vjv_i\rightarrow v_j is an edge for all 0≀i<j≀k0\leq i<j\leq k. An undirected graph is semi-transitive if it admits a semi-transitive orientation. Semi-transitive graphs include several important classes of graphs such as 3-colorable graphs, comparability graphs, and circle graphs, and they are precisely the class of word-representable graphs studied extensively in the literature. In this paper, we study semi-transitive orientability of the celebrated Kneser graph K(n,k)K(n,k), which is the graph whose vertices correspond to the kk-element subsets of a set of nn elements, and where two vertices are adjacent if and only if the two corresponding sets are disjoint. We show that for nβ‰₯15kβˆ’24n\geq 15k-24, K(n,k)K(n,k) is not semi-transitive, while for k≀n≀2k+1k\leq n\leq 2k+1, K(n,k)K(n,k) is semi-transitive. Also, we show computationally that a subgraph SS on 16 vertices and 36 edges of K(8,3)K(8,3), and thus K(8,3)K(8,3) itself on 56 vertices and 280 edges, is non-semi-transitive. SS and K(8,3)K(8,3) are the first explicit examples of triangle-free non-semi-transitive graphs, whose existence was established via Erd\H{o}s' theorem by Halld\'{o}rsson et al. in 2011. Moreover, we show that the complement graph K(n,k)β€Ύ\overline{K(n,k)} of K(n,k)K(n,k) is semi-transitive if and only if nβ‰₯2kn\geq 2k
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