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Coarse-graining a hypergraph

$\DeclareMathOperator{\poly}{\mathrm{poly}}$I have asked this question on math.SE here, but couldn't get a satisfactory answer. I have also asked a related question on math overflow here, but haven't ...
Pranay Gorantla's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
173 views

Connected partitions of bounded degree graphs with parts of bounded sizes

A connected partition of a graph is a partition of its vertex-set such that the induced subgraph on each part is connected. Question 1: Are there real numbers $c\ge1$ and $r\ge1$ such that for any ...
Pranay Gorantla's user avatar
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
2 votes
1 answer
105 views

"Spanning trees" for connected linear hypergraphs

Starting point. For every simple, undirected graph $G=(V,E)$ there is $E_0\subseteq E$ such that $(V,E_0)$ is minimally connected: the spanning tree. The goal of this question is to find out whether ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
239 views

Chip firing on hypergraphs

A (finite) hypergraph is a pair $(V, \mathcal{E})$ where $V$ is a finite set of vertices and $\mathcal{E}\subseteq\mathcal{P}(V)$ with each $E\in\mathcal{E}$ having at least two elements; a ...
Noah Schweber's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
136 views

Longest paths and cycles in Steiner triple systems

A Steiner triple system is a 3-uniform hypergraph in which every pair of vertices is contained in exactly one edge. A linear cycle (also called loose cycle) length $t$ consists of $2t$ cyclically ...
X. Li's user avatar
  • 373
0 votes
1 answer
163 views

Isomorphism of two regular hypergraphs

Consider two undirected $k$-regular hypergraphs on $n$ vertices with (see e.g. OEIS A319190). Are the two hypergraphs isomorphic if an only if the two multisets of the sizes of their respective ...
Fabius Wiesner's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
131 views

Turán density of hypergraphs with very few edges

As usual, for an $r$-uniform hypergraph $G$, denote by $ex_r(n,G)$ the maximum number of edges an $r$-uniform, $G$-free hypergraph on $n$ vertices can have, and let $\lim \frac{ex_r(n,G)}{\binom nr}\...
domotorp's user avatar
  • 18.7k
1 vote
1 answer
90 views

How to get a partite minimum co-degree in a $k$-partite $k$-uniform hypergraph?

I have a $k$-partite $k$-uniform hypergraph $H$ with $V(H) = V_1 \cup\cdots\cup V_k$ (each $|V_i|=n$ for $i \in [k]$), such that the minimum vertex degree $\delta(H) \ge Cn^{k-1}$ for a constant $C$. ...
kleinbottle's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
64 views

The vertex-covering number of a particular hypergraph

$\newcommand{\cM}{{\mathcal M}}$ For an integer $n>0$, let $\cM_n$ denote the set of all matrices with three rows and $n$ columns such that every column is obtained by permitting the coordinates ...
Seva's user avatar
  • 23k
0 votes
0 answers
57 views

Maximum number of h-dimensional hyper-edges without forming any (h+1) complete subgraph

This is about graph theory. Define an h-dimensional hyperedge as a set that contains h vertices. A graph of (h+1) vertices is h-complete if any h combination (or any subset with size h) is an h-...
TanG's user avatar
  • 23
1 vote
0 answers
54 views

Chromatic number of 2-graph vs hypergraph of point-line incidences

Define the chromatic number $\chi(H)$ of a (hyper)graph $H$ as the smallest $k$ such that its vertices can be $k$-colored such that no (hyper)edge is monochromatic. Given a finite set of points $P$ in ...
domotorp's user avatar
  • 18.7k
11 votes
0 answers
195 views

Number of triangle-free graphs with prescribed number of edges

This question is posted from StackExchange since it received no answer there. Let $f(n, e)$ be the number of triangle-free graphs on $n$ vertices and $e$ edges. From empirical evidence, I am motivated ...
abacaba's user avatar
  • 384
0 votes
1 answer
81 views

Line graphs of complete hypergraphs as complement of Kneser graphs

Since the Johnson graph/triangular graph $J(n,2)$ is the complement of the Kneser graph $K(n,2)$, which is also incidentally the line graph of the complete graph $K_n$, I thought whether the same can ...
vidyarthi's user avatar
  • 2,089
4 votes
1 answer
139 views

Strongly minimal covers for clique hypergraphs of graphs

$\DeclareMathOperator\Cliq{Cliq}$A hypergraph $H$ is a pair consisting of a set $V$ of vertices and a family of subsets of $V$ called edges. One class of examples is obtained by taking a graph $G=(V,E)...
Tri's user avatar
  • 1,644
5 votes
0 answers
121 views

Chromatic index of hypergraphs

A proper $k$-edge-coloring of a hypergraph $H$ is a mapping from $E(H)$ to a set of $k$ colors so that every pair of adjacent edges receives different colors. We say $H$ is $k$-edge-colorable if $H$ ...
W. Paul Liu's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
209 views

3-uniform tetrahedron-free hypergraph on seven vertices

My problem concerns 3-uniform hypergraphs. Let $f(n)$ be the maximal number of edges in a 3-uniform hypergraph such that no four edges form a "tetrahedron", i.e., four edges that join the ...
Thomas's user avatar
  • 2,811
4 votes
3 answers
780 views

Does an $(x, bx)$-biregular graph always contain a $x$-regular bipartite subgraph?

I guess a discrete-mathematics-related question is still welcome in MO since I was new to the community and learned from this amazing past post. The following claim is a simplified and abstract form ...
Yungchen Jen's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
97 views

What is known about chromatic polynomial of hypergraph at $-1$

Let $H$ be a hypergraph and let $P_H$ denote its chromatic polynomial. I am interested in the best results interpreting $P_H(-1)$. I am interested both in the general case (which I think is hard) as ...
John Machacek's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
257 views

Relationship between minimum vertex cover and matching width

Let $H$ be a 3-partite 3-uniform hypergraph with minimum vertex cover number $\tau(H)$ (i.e. $\tau(H)=\min\{|Q|: Q\subseteq V(H), e\cap Q\neq \emptyset \text{ for all } e\in E(H)\}$). Question: Is $\...
Louis D's user avatar
  • 1,701
3 votes
1 answer
164 views

making a random uniform hypergraph linear

Let $\mathcal{H}_{n,p,h}=(V,E)$ be a random $h$-uniform hypergraph on $[n]$, sampled according to the usual binomial distribution. We known that with high probability, the number of edges in $\mathcal{...
Thomas Lesgourgues's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
159 views

Hyper-degree sequences: How to count them and how to construct hyper-graphs from them?

From an answer to this question I have learned how to ask this question properly. Consider a $k$-uniform hypergraph on $n$ nodes, i.e. a family of $k$-subsets of $[n]= \{1,2,\dots,n\}$ (the hyperedges)...
Hans-Peter Stricker's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
154 views

What characterizes the incidence matrix of a tripartite hypergraph?

The incidence matrix of a graph $G = (V,E)$ is a matrix with $|V|$ rows and $|E|$ columns, in which element $v,e$ is $1$ if node $v$ is incident to edge $e$, and $0$ otherwise. In bipartite graphs, ...
Erel Segal-Halevi's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
764 views

What is a bipartite hypergraph?

Bipartite graphs are very useful, and I am looking for a generalization of this concept to hypergraphs. I found two different definitions of bipartite hypergraphs: In the Wikipedia page Hypergraph, a ...
Erel Segal-Halevi's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
404 views

Turan numbers of r-partite hypergraphs

Let $H$ be a balanced $r$-partite $r$-uniform hypergraph with $nr$ vertices. (Each part of this hypergraph consists of $n$ vertices; every hyperedge has exactly one vertex in each part.) Denote a ...
Ilya's user avatar
  • 251
0 votes
0 answers
39 views

hypergraph product that preserve expansion properties

I am looking for a hypergraphs product of hypergraph H1,H2 that preserves some expansion properties of H1,H2. The expansion property I am looking at is HD-random walk. The product I am looking for is ...
user2679290's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
62 views

Induced subgraphs of the line graph of a dense linear hypergraph

Given a hypergraph $H=(V,E)$ we associate to it its line graph $L(H)$ given by $V(L(H)) =E$ and $$E(L(H)) = \big\{\{e_1,e_2\}: e_1\neq e_2 \in E \text{ and } e_1\cap e_2 \neq \emptyset \big\}.$$ We ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
56 views

Injective edge choice functions in linear hypergraphs

A linear hypergraph is a hypergraph $H=(V,E)$ such that for $e\in E$ we have $|e|\geq 2$, and if $e\neq e_1\in E$, then $|e\cap e_1| \leq 1$. An injective edge choice function of a linear ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
77 views

Consequences of Ramsey-numbers of hypergraphs

We know that the (2-color) Ramsey-numbers for $3$-uniform hypergraphs are between roughly $2^{n^2}$ and $2^{2^n}$, and the situation is similar to $k$-uniform hypergraphs for every $k\ge 3$. (A recent ...
domotorp's user avatar
  • 18.7k
3 votes
2 answers
184 views

Does any long path in a planar graph contain one of O(n) k-tuple of vertices?

My question is a bit related to both the container method and shallow cell complexity. Let's start with that the number of length $\ell$ paths (where $\ell$ denotes the number of vertices of the path!)...
domotorp's user avatar
  • 18.7k
-1 votes
1 answer
85 views

Finding a good transversal basis

A hypergraph $H=(V,E)$ consists of an non-empty set $V$ and a collection $E\subseteq {\cal P}(V)\setminus \{\emptyset\}$ of non-empty subsets of $V$. A transversal of $H$ is a set $T\subseteq V$ such ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
20 votes
3 answers
991 views

Does the hypergraph of subgroups determine a group?

A hypergraph is a pair $H=(V,E)$ where $V\neq \emptyset$ is a set and $E\subseteq{\cal P}(V)$ is a collection of subsets of $V$. We say two hypergraphs $H_i=(V_i, E_i)$ for $i=1,2$ are isomorphic if ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
50 views

An equation involving fractional covering number of hypergraphs

Let $\mathcal{H}=(S,\mathcal{X})$ be a hypergraph, where $S = \{ s_1, \ldots, s_n \}$, and $\mathcal{X} = \{ X_1, \ldots, X_m \}$. The dual hypergraph $\mathcal{H}^*$ of $\mathcal{H}$ is the ...
Victor's user avatar
  • 655
1 vote
1 answer
66 views

Inequality about the minimum vertex degree in $k$-uniform hypergraphs

Let $H=(V,E)$ be a $k$-uniform hypergraph with $n$ vertices, that is, $V:=V(H)$ is a $n$-element finite set of vertices and $E:=E(H)\subset\binom{V}{k}$ is a family of $k$-element subsets of $V$. ...
Frank Z.K. Li's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
91 views

Steiner-like systems with large edges and many intersections

Let $l\geq 3$ be an integer. Is there $n\in\mathbb{N}$ and a hypergraph $H=(\{1,\ldots,n\},E)$ with the following properties? for all $e\in E$ we have $|e| \geq l$ $e_1\neq e_2 \in E \implies |e_1 \...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
59 views

Cardinalities of saturated linear hypergraphs

A saturated linear hypergraph is a hypergraph $H=(V,E)$ such that $|e|\geq 2$ for all $e\in E$, $|e_1\cap e_2| = 1$ for all $e_1, e_2\in E$ with $e_1\neq e_2$, and $|\{e\in E:v\in e\}| = 2.$ Let $E$...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
-2 votes
1 answer
86 views

Complete and saturated linear hypergraphs

A linear hypergraph is a hypergraph $H=(V,E)$ such that $|e|\geq 2$ for all $e\in E$, $|e_1\cap e_2|\leq 1$ for all $e_1, e_2\in E$ with $e_1\neq e_2$. We call a linear hypergraph complete if there ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
228 views

Minimal number of edges for complete linear hypergraphs

A complete linear hypergraph is a hypergraph $H=(V,E)$ such that $|e|\geq 2$ for all $e\in E$, $|e_1\cap e_2|=1$ for all $e_1, e_2\in E$ with $e_1\neq e_2$, and for all $v\in V$ we have $|\{e\in E:v\...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
329 views

Is it true that any $3$-uniform hypergraph that is not $k$-colorable must have $\Omega(k^3)$ edges?

What is the best lower bound in terms of $k$ on the number of edges in a $3$-uniform hypergraph that is not $k$-colorable? Thanks in advance.
TCS-user-23's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
191 views

Is there a Degenerate Dependency Local Lemma?

The Lovasz Local Lemma has several generalizations, with names usually starting with L, such as Lopsided or Lefthanded. Here I ask whether another possible generalization (for which I could not yet ...
domotorp's user avatar
  • 18.7k
4 votes
0 answers
95 views

Is the size of maximum matching in vertex transitive 3-uniform hyper-graph on $n$ vertices always $\Omega(n)$?

What is the best known lower bound on the size of the maximum matching in a vertex transitive $3$-uniform hyper-graph?
Raghav Kulkarni's user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
183 views

Linear intersection number and vertex covering number

A linear hypergraph is a pair $\pi=(X, L)$ where $X\neq \emptyset$ is a set and $L\subseteq {\cal P}(X)$ has the following properties: for $e\in L$ we have $|e|\geq 2$; if $e_1\neq e_2 \in L$ then $|...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
127 views

When does a hypergraph represent maximal independent sets?

Let $G = (V,E)$ be a simple graph. Then, we can view the set of maximal independent sets (or the set of maximal cliques) as a hypergraph $H = (V, E')$. This is quite a useful device when connecting ...
Young-Han Kim's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
137 views

Counting regular Hypergraphs

The problem of counting regular graphs on $n$ vertices is notoriously hard. It seems like counting regular hypergraphs on $n$ vertices should be much easier (I am placing no uniformity condition). ...
user43928's user avatar
  • 175
0 votes
2 answers
331 views

Hypergraph cartesian join operation (over same vertex set)

Consider two hypergraphs $H_1 = (V, \mathscr{E}_1), H_2 = (V, \mathscr{E}_2)$ over the same vertex set $V$. am interested in what could be called a "cartesian join" operation building a new ...
vzn's user avatar
  • 529
0 votes
0 answers
71 views

products/factoring of two hypergraphs with same vertex set?

all the basic products for graphs have been extended to hypergraphs[1]. is there a concept of a product of hypergraphs with the same vertex set? has this been studied? normally the hypergraph ...
vzn's user avatar
  • 529
6 votes
1 answer
324 views

Realiziability of hypergraphs as link (multi)sets of ordinary graphs

I have a question about hypergraphs that I hope some combinatorics/graph theory experts can answer. The motivation for this question is group-theoretic and comes from the study of a certain space of ...
Ilya Kapovich's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
517 views

Finding maximum value of degree-3 homogeneous polynomials when variables sum to 1

I would like to be able to find maximum values of degree-3 homogeneous polynomials, when the variables are non-negative real numbers that sum to 1. For example, For example, the maximum value of $xy^...
Emil's user avatar
  • 726
6 votes
0 answers
305 views

A maximum discrepancy hypergraph 2-colouring problem

This is sort of a hypergraph-ish question that I feel should be easy to prove or disprove but I can't see it right now. The setup is as follows. We have a vertex set partitioned in to sets $V_1,\...
Andrew D. King's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
1k views

k-uniform k-partite hypergraph matching in polynomial time

I have what seems like an elementary question, but google didn't throw up any answers for it. I would appreciate any pointers that MO users may provide. It is well known that for $k\geq 3$ finding ...
Ankur's user avatar
  • 61