47 research outputs found
On graph equivalences preserved under extensions
Let R be an equivalence relation on graphs. By the strengthening of R we mean
the relation R' such that graphs G and H are in the relation R' if for every
graph F, the union of the graphs G and F is in the relation R with the union of
the graphs H and F. We study strengthenings of equivalence relations on graphs.
The most important case that we consider concerns equivalence relations defined
by graph properties. We obtain results on the strengthening of equivalence
relations determined by the properties such as being a k-connected graph,
k-colorable, hamiltonian and planar
Tight Euler tours in uniform hypergraphs - computational aspects
By a tight tour in a -uniform hypergraph we mean any sequence of its
vertices such that for all the set
is an edge of (where operations on
indices are computed modulo ) and the sets for are
pairwise different. A tight tour in is a tight Euler tour if it contains
all edges of . We prove that the problem of deciding if a given -uniform
hypergraph has a tight Euler tour is NP-complete, and that it cannot be solved
in time (where is the number of edges in the input hypergraph),
unless the ETH fails. We also present an exact exponential algorithm for the
problem, whose time complexity matches this lower bound, and the space
complexity is polynomial. In fact, this algorithm solves a more general problem
of computing the number of tight Euler tours in a given uniform hypergraph
Chains, antichains, and fibres
AbstractCall a subset of an ordered set a fibre if it meets every maximal antichain. We prove several instances of the conjecture that, in an ordered set P without splitting elements, there is a subset F such that both F and P − F are fibres. For example, this holds in every ordered set without splitting points and in which each chain has at most four elements. As it turns out several of our results can be cast more generally in the language of graphs from which we may derive “complementary” results about cutsets of ordered sets, that is, subsets which meet every maximal chain. One example is this: In a finite graph G every minimal transversal is independent if and only if G contains no path of length three
Computing Homomorphisms in Hereditary Graph Classes: The Peculiar Case of the 5-Wheel and Graphs with No Long Claws
For graphs G and H, an H-coloring of G is an edge-preserving mapping from V(G) to V(H). In the H-Coloring problem the graph H is fixed and we ask whether an instance graph G admits an H-coloring. A generalization of this problem is H-ColoringExt, where some vertices of G are already mapped to vertices of H and we ask if this partial mapping can be extended to an H-coloring.
We study the complexity of variants of H-Coloring in F-free graphs, i.e., graphs excluding a fixed graph F as an induced subgraph. For integers a,b,c ? 1, by S_{a,b,c} we denote the graph obtained by identifying one endvertex of three paths on a+1, b+1, and c+1 vertices, respectively. For odd k ? 5, by W_k we denote the graph obtained from the k-cycle by adding a universal vertex.
As our main algorithmic result we show that W_5-ColoringExt is polynomial-time solvable in S_{2,1,1}-free graphs. This result exhibits an interesting non-monotonicity of H-ColoringExt with respect to taking induced subgraphs of H. Indeed, W_5 contains a triangle, and K_3-Coloring, i.e., classical 3-coloring, is NP-hard already in claw-free (i.e., S_{1,1,1}-free) graphs. Our algorithm is based on two main observations:
1) W_5-ColoringExt in S_{2,1,1}-free graphs can be in polynomial time reduced to a variant of the problem of finding an independent set intersecting all triangles, and
2) the latter problem can be solved in polynomial time in S_{2,1,1}-free graphs.
We complement this algorithmic result with several negative ones. In particular, we show that W_5-Coloring is NP-hard in P_t-free graphs for some constant t and W_5-ColoringExt is NP-hard in S_{3,3,3}-free graphs of bounded degree. This is again uncommon, as usually problems that are NP-hard in S_{a,b,c}-free graphs for some constant a,b,c are already hard in claw-free graph
Majorization, packing, covering and matroids
AbstractWe show that under some assumptions the sets of sequences of block sizes of some partitions (resp. packings or coverings) are order ideals (filters) in some partially ordered sets. Therefore, to describe them we only need the sets of maximal (minimal) elements of the ideals (filters). The orders in the partially ordered sets turn out to be either the well-known majorization relations or some of their variations. Matroids provide basic examples satisfying assumptions of our theorems
Clique packings and clique partitions of graphs without odd chordless cycles
In this paper we consider partitions (resp. packings) of graphs without odd chordless cycles into cliques of order at least 2. We give a structure theorem, min-max results and characterization theorems for this kind of partitions and packings