Weighted $K_4$ are the simplest non-trivial symmetric TSP instances that already exhibit a rich variety of properties, e.g. that the shortest edge is not contained in the optimal solution or that the longest edge is contained in the optimal solution and I was wondering how many essentially different order-relational properties weighted $K_4$ can exhibit.
Defintions:
$K_4:= G(V,E,\Omega)$
$V=\lbrace 1,\,2,\,3,\,4\rbrace$
$E=\big\lbrace\,\lbrace 1,2\rbrace,\,\lbrace 1,3\rbrace,\,\lbrace 1,4\rbrace,\,\lbrace 2,3\rbrace,\,\lbrace 2,4\rbrace,\,\lbrace 3,4\rbrace\,\big\rbrace$
$\Omega=\lbrace \omega_{12},\omega_{13},\omega_{14},\omega_{23},\omega_{24},\omega_{34}\rbrace⊂\mathbb{R}_+,\ \operatorname{card}(Ω)=6,\\ \phantom{\Omega=}\ i\ne j\implies\omega_i\ne\omega_j$
$\mathrm{w}\in\mathbb{R}_+^6:\mathrm{w}\in\Omega,\ i\lt j\implies \mathrm{w}_i\lt\mathrm{w}_j$ is the sorted sequence of edge weights.
$G$'s set of weighted triangles is denoted by$\lbrace T_1, T_2, T_3, T_4\rbrace$ and defined via:
$T_1:=\lbrace e_{12},e_{13},e_{23}\rbrace,\quad |T_1| := \omega_{12}+\omega_{13}+\omega_{23}=\mathrm{w}_{\pi(1)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(3)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)}$
$T_2:=\lbrace e_{12},e_{14},e_{24}\rbrace,\quad |T_2| := \omega_{12}+\omega_{14}+\omega_{24}=\mathrm{w}_{\pi(1)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(5)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}$
$T_3:=\lbrace e_{13},e_{14},e_{34}\rbrace,\quad |T_3| := \omega_{13}+\omega_{14}+\omega_{34}=\mathrm{w}_{\pi(3)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(5)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}$
$T_4:=\lbrace e_{34},e_{24},e_{23}\rbrace,\quad |T_4| := \omega_{34}+\omega_{24}+\omega_{23}=\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)}$
$|T_1|\lt|T_4|,\quad |T_2|\lt|T_4|,\quad |T_3|\lt|T_4|$
$G$'s set of weighted perfect matchings is denoted by $\lbrace M_1, M_2, M_3\rbrace$ and defined via
$M_1:=\lbrace e_{12},e_{34} \rbrace,\quad|M_1| := \omega_{12}+\omega_{34}=\mathrm{w}_{\pi(1)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}$
$M_2:=\lbrace e_{13},e_{24}\rbrace,\quad|M_2| := \omega_{13}+\omega_{24}=\mathrm{w}_{\pi(3)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}$
$M_3:=\lbrace e_{14},e_{23}\rbrace,\quad|M_3| := \omega_{14}+\omega_{23}=\mathrm{w}_{\pi(5)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)}$
$|M_1|\lt|M_2|\lt|M_3|$
If a canonical order is imposed on the edges, like e.g.
$\Big(\ e_{12},\, e_{34},\, e_{13},\, e_{24},\, e_{14},\, e_{23}\ \Big):=\\ \Big(\ M_1\setminus T_4,\ M_1\cap T_4,\ M_2\setminus T_4,\ M_2\cap T_4,\ M_3\setminus T_4,\ M_3\cap T_4\ \Big)$
each edge's weight is also unambiguously defined by its position in that order, i.e. that position serves as the index into the ascending order of edge-weights, interpreted in this question as an index permutation denoted by $\pi(i)$.
Questions:
what is the cardinality of the following set of permutations: \begin{align}\mathscr{P}= & \lbrace\\ & \pi(1,2,3,4,5,6)\,\big|\\ & \exists \mathrm{w}\in\mathbb{R}_+^6:\\ & i\lt j\implies\mathrm{w}_i\lt\mathrm{w}_j,\\ & \mathrm{w}_{\pi(1)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}\lt\mathrm{w}_{\pi(3)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}\lt\mathrm{w}_{\pi(5)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)},\\ & \mathrm{w}_{\pi(1)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(3)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)}\lt\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)},\\ & \mathrm{w}_{\pi(1)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(5)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}\lt\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)},\\ & \mathrm{w}_{\pi(3)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(5)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}\lt\mathrm{w}_{\pi(2)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(4)}+\mathrm{w}_{\pi(6)},\\ & \rbrace\end{align}
- without further constraints?
- what is the smallest set of real values that generate all possible valid permutation?
edit:
the notation I use is to be interpreted in the following way: $\mathrm{w}_{\pi(i)}$ is the index in the ordered sequence of weights, to which index $i$ in the canonical sequence will be mapped via the permutation. if e.g. $\pi(6)=5$ then edge $e_{23}$'s weight $\omega_{23}$ is the 5th largest of the six weights.