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5 votes
1 answer
409 views

4-color theorem for hypergraphs

Question. Does every hypergraph that does not admit a complete minor with $5$ elements have a coloring with $4$ colors? Below are the definitions to make this precise. If $H = (V, E)$ is a hypergraph ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
80 views

Infinite complete minor in $\min,\max$-graph on $\mathbb{N}$

Let $[\omega]^2 =\big\{\{x,y\}:x\neq y \in \omega\big\}$ denote the collection of all 2-element subsets of the non-negative integers. Let $$E=\big\{\{p,q\} : p,q \in [\omega]^2 \text{ and } \max(p)=\...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
165 views

$|G|/\alpha(G) \leq \eta(G)$ where $\eta(G)$ is the Hadwiger number

Let $G=(V,E)$ be a finite, simple, undirected graph. The Hadwiger number $\eta(G)$ is the maximum $n\in\mathbb{N}$ such that $K_n$ is a minor of $G$. Hadwiger's celebrated conjecture states that $\chi(...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
130 views

Complete minor graphs

Is there any result or known way to find complete minors of graphs? I want to find complete minors of generalized Petersen graphs and $3$-regular graphs. I guess that generalized Petersen graphs $G (n,...
Rouhollah Mofid's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
98 views

Classes of graphs that are minors of bounded degree graphs in the same class

Notice that every planar graph $G$ is a minor of a planar graph $H$ with maximum degree $\Delta(H)\leq 3$ (replace each vertex of $G$ by a sub-cubic tree to obtain $H$). The same idea can be applied ...
Agelos's user avatar
  • 1,926
6 votes
1 answer
566 views

Does every $4$-connected nonplanar graph contain a $K_5$-minor?

By Kuratowski's theorem, every nonplanar graph contains a (topological) minor of $K_5$ or $K_{3,3}$. But I observed that every time I construct a $4$-connected nonplanar graph, it always contains not ...
okw1124's user avatar
  • 341
5 votes
1 answer
429 views

Menger's theorem with restrictions on where the paths can begin and end

Let $k\in\mathbb N$. Given a finite graph with two subsets of vertices $X$ and $Y$, Menger's Theorem gives a criterion for when there are $k$ pairwise disjoint paths starting in $X$ and ending in $Y$. ...
Tri's user avatar
  • 1,644
4 votes
0 answers
67 views

Increasing the Hadwiger number by making any pair of non-adjacent points adjacent

Let $G=(V,E)$ be a finite, simple, undirected graph. The Hadwiger number $\eta(G)$ of $G$ is defined to be the largest positive integer $n\in\mathbb{N}$ such that the complete graph $K_n$ is a minor ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
114 views

Connected partition number of a graph

Let $G=(V,E)$ be a finite, simple, undirected graph. We say that a partition ${\cal P}$ of $V$ into non-empty subsets of $V$ is connected if any two distinct blocks are connected by an edge, or more ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
387 views

Induced minors and induced topological minors

Question: For which graphs $H$ is the following true? Every graph that contains $H$ as an induced minor also contains $H$ as an induced topological minor. Definitions: Let $G$ and $H$ be graphs. $H$ ...
monkeymaths's user avatar
  • 1,169
10 votes
2 answers
433 views

Does minimal degree $n$ imply a $K_n$ minor

Is it true that any finite graph has a $K_n$ minor, where $n$ is a minimal vertex degree?
Arshak Aivazian's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
188 views

Generalized graph-minor theorem?

Consider the following generalized graph-minor theorem: GM($κ,λ$): Given any collection $S$ of $κ$ simple undirected graphs each with less than $λ$ vertices, there are distinct graphs $G,H$ in $S$ ...
user21820's user avatar
  • 2,912
6 votes
1 answer
295 views

Disjoint paths between four vertices

Consider the following property of an undirected graph: For any four distinct vertices $a,b,c,d$, there is a path from $a$ to $b$ and a path from $c$ to $d$ such that the two paths do not share any ...
user137930's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
93 views

Compactness of Hadwiger number

Is there an infinite, simple, undirected graph $G=(V,E)$ such that there is $n\in\mathbb{N}$ with the following properties? $K_n$ is a minor of $G$, but $K_{n+1}$ is not a minor of $G$, and if $F$ ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
11 votes
3 answers
409 views

Two disjoint trees

Let $G$ be a graph and let $A_1, A_2 \subseteq V(G)$ be disjoint sets of vertices. Let us call $(A_1, A_2)$ independent if there exist vertex-disjoint trees $T_1, T_2 \subseteq G$ within $G$ which ...
monkeymaths's user avatar
  • 1,169
3 votes
0 answers
143 views

Hadwiger number of Erdös-Faber-Lovasz graphs

For any set $X$, let $[X]^2 = \big\{\{a,b\}:a,b \in X, a\neq b\big\}$. We call a finite, simple, undirected graph $G=(V,E)$ an $n$-Erdös-Faber-Lovasz (EFL-) graph if there are $n$ subsets $S_1,\...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
341 views

Bounds on degrees of minors obtained by edge contractions of regular graphs

Given a connected $d$-regular graph $G=(V,E)$, generate a sequence of minors by performing only edge contractions and loop deletions (as, e.g., in Karger's algorithm) until the graph collapses to a ...
delete000's user avatar
  • 163
5 votes
0 answers
94 views

Increasing the Hadwiger number by identifying non-adjacent points

This is a specialization of a more general, still unanswered question. Suppose $G$ is a finite, simple graph. Let $h(G)$ denote the Hadwiger number, that is, the maximum $n\in\mathbb{N}$ such that $...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
86 views

Hadwiger critical graphs of arbitrarily high chromatic number

This is an update to an older question admitting a trivial example to answer it. Suppose $G$ is a finite simple graph. Let $h(G)$ denote the Hadwiger number of $G$; that is, the maximum $n\in\mathbb{...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
-2 votes
1 answer
138 views

Identifying two non-adjacent vertices and the effect on the Hadwiger number [closed]

Suppose $G$ is a finite simple graph. Let $h(G)$ denote the Hadwiger number of $G$; that is, the maximum $n\in\mathbb{N}$ such that $K_n$ is a minor of $G$. What is an example of a graph $G_0=(V_0, ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
124 views

Characterizing SP-DAGs by Forbidden Minors?

So it's well-known that an alternative way to define a series-parallel (undirected graph) is by the forbidden minor $K_4$. Is there a known analog of this definition for directed graphs — ...
Daisy Sophia Hollman's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
59 views

Is there an established notion of 'signed treewidth' for signed graphs?

By a signed graph, I mean a graph where each edge is designated as either odd or even (as in Guenin's result for weakly bipartite graphs). It is well-known that for (unsigned, or usual) graphs, ...
user31016's user avatar
  • 311
4 votes
0 answers
184 views

Hadwiger's conjecture in the language of graph homomorphisms

Consider the following statement: (S): If $G$ is not a complete graph, then there is a minor $M$ of $G$ such that $M \not \cong G$, and there is a graph homomorphism $f:G\to M$. Hadwiger's ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
252 views

Size of forbidden minors for treewidth

For any $k$, the class of graphs of treewidth at most $k$ can be characterized by a finite set of forbidden minors. For treewidth $1$ and $2$, the set is of size $1$. Then for treewidth $3$, the set ...
user31016's user avatar
  • 311
2 votes
3 answers
301 views

Hadwiger number and minimal degree

Suppose $G$ is a finite simple graph and $\eta(G)$ is the maximum $n\in\mathbb{N}$ such that $K_n$ is a minor of $G$. If $\delta(G)$ is the minimal degree of $G$, do we have $\delta(G)\leq\eta(G)$?
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
274 views

Is there a polynomial-time algorithm to check if a signed graph contains an odd-K5 minor?

I suspect this exists, if anyone has a reference please that would be very helpful. By signed graph, I mean each edge is designated either odd or even (e.g. as in Guenin's result for weakly bipartite ...
user31016's user avatar
  • 311
4 votes
2 answers
266 views

Asymptotics of list size in Robertson-Seymour theorem

A planar graph cannot have $K_5$ and $K_{3,3}$ as minors. Robertson-Seymour theorem generalizes this by stating for every genus $g$ there is a finite list of forbidden minor graphs that are ...
user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
401 views

Is there a version of Robertson-Seymour's graph minor theorem known to apply to signed graphs?

Here a signed graph is one where each edge is signed either odd or even. A cycle is odd or even according to the sum of the signs of its edges. For a given signed graph, a resigning may be performed ...
user31016's user avatar
  • 311
9 votes
0 answers
499 views

A separation property of graphs of bounded tree-width

The following separation property of trees is well-known and in fact easy to prove (see e.g. the paper "Covering a hypergraph of subgraphs" by Noga Alon, Lemma 2.2) Let $T$ be a tree and $r, m$ non-...
monkeymaths's user avatar
  • 1,169
2 votes
1 answer
181 views

What is the relation between size of maximum clique and branchwidth?

Let $bw(G)$ be the branchwidth of graph $G$ and $\omega(G)$ be the size of maximum clique in $G$. I think the following inequality holds: $$ \omega(G)\leq bw(G) $$ Intuition: Assume (in reverse of ...
Omid Ebrahimi's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
400 views

A claim from "Graph minors - a survey" by Robertson and Seymour

Can someone give me a proof sketch for this: Let $\mathscr{P}_n$ be the set of all graphs which do not contain a path on $n$ vertices as a subgraph. Define the type of a graph inductively as: the type ...
Thinniyam Srinivasan Ramanatha's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
312 views

Do graphs with large number of paths contain large chain minor?

Definition: A "$k$-chain" is a multi-graph obtained from a path of length $k$ by duplicating every edge. Note that the number of paths between two endpoints of a $k$-chain is $2^k.$ Question: Let $G$...
Raghav Kulkarni's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
679 views

Big binary tree as an induced subgraph

I believe this is true: Suppose $G$ is a graph. If $G$ has a subdivision of a large binary tree, prove that $G$ has an induced subgraph which is a subdivision of a large binary tree or the line ...
Cosmin Pohoata's user avatar
7 votes
2 answers
827 views

Graph minor check

Are there any good algebraic/algorithmic tools available to check if a given graph $H$ is a minor of $G$ from the adjacency matrix of $G$?
Turbo's user avatar
  • 13.9k
46 votes
8 answers
5k views

Can a problem be simultaneously polynomial time and undecidable?

The Robertson-Seymour theorem on graph minors leads to some interesting conundrums. The theorem states that any minor-closed class of graphs can be described by a finite number of excluded minors. As ...
Gordon Royle's user avatar
  • 12.7k
21 votes
3 answers
2k views

Obstructions for embedding a graph on a surface of genus g

Kuratowski's theorem tells us the complete graph $K_5$ and the bipartite graph $K_{3,3}$ are the only obstructions to a graph being planar, ie embeddable in the plane with no edge-crossings. Is the ...
Dr Shello's user avatar
  • 1,180