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28 votes
3 answers
2k views

When does a graph underlie the Hasse diagram of a poset?

For any finite poset $P=(X,\leq)$ there is a graph $G$ underlying its Hasse diagram $H=(X,\lessdot)$, so that $V(G)=X$ and $E(G)=\{\{u,v\}:u\lessdot v\}$. With that said, is it possible to ...
3 votes
0 answers
127 views

A class of Kripke frames which preserves validity

The background of our discussion is intuitionistic logic, i.e. the following definitions are intuitionistic Kripke frame. For $1\leq s\leq n-2$, the frame $\mathcal{C}_n(s)$ denotes the frame which is ...
10 votes
0 answers
309 views

Mapping graphs to ordinals

Robertson-Seymour theorem implies that graph minor relation is a well-quasi-ordering, which means (among other things) that this relation can be extended to a well-order, and other result says that ...
1 vote
1 answer
98 views

Characterization of edge posets

Given an acyclic directed graph $G$, the set $E(G)$ of edges of $G$ equipped with the reachable order $\to$ is called the edge poset of $G$, where for two edges $e_1\to e_2$ means that there is a ...
10 votes
1 answer
492 views

is there a ‘nice’ lattice on the set of unlabelled graphs with $n$ vertices?

It is easy to endow the set of vertex-labelled graphs with $n$ vertices with a lattice structure: take the union and the intersection of the edge set as meet and join respectively. However, I wonder ...
11 votes
0 answers
286 views

Does every finite poset have a rigid endomorphism?

Crossposted on Mathematics. In this post, an order-preserving self-map of a poset $X$ will be called an endomorphism of $X$, and such an endomorphism $f$ will be called rigid if the only automorphism ...
5 votes
0 answers
191 views

Additional examples of classes of networks whose Hasse diagram of the poset is a perfect graph

This question is very important for my research, which is why I ask it here. I do not have a formal background in graph theory so please excuse me if I state a term incorrectly (and feel free to ...
6 votes
2 answers
882 views

Reconstruction puzzles

[Added: This is a follow-up of an earlier post.] Consider the following "reconstruction puzzle", stated informally: Given a concrete poset, e.g. the poset of undirected unlabeled finite graphs ...
1 vote
2 answers
245 views

Mapping of subcubes of a $(d+k)$-hypercube onto subcubes of a $d$-hypercube

Denote by $Q_n$ the $n$-dimensional hypercube. A vertex of $Q_n$ is represented by a vector of $n$ $\{0,1\}$-bits. An edge corresponding to two vertices whose vectors differ in one coordinate is ...
8 votes
1 answer
1k views

Wikipedia article on forbidden graph substructures

I apologies if this is too trivial a question or if I am over complicating anything here. But I was hoping for some clarification in an article I was reading about forbidden graph substructures on ...
32 votes
9 answers
5k views

How many groups of size at most n are there? What is the asymptotic growth rate? And what of rings, fields, graphs, partial orders, etc.?

Question. How many (isomorphism types of) finite groups of size at most n are there? What is the asymptotic growth rate? And the same question for rings, fields, graphs, partial orders, etc. ...
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 $S$ ...
1 vote
0 answers
97 views

Generalization of the linear extension theorem to directed acyclic graphs

Using Zorn's lemma one can prove a generalization of the order extension theorem, that states any acyclic digraph is always contained in another acyclic unilaterally connected digraph on the same ...
0 votes
1 answer
52 views

Minimizing the set of "faulty" edges in a map between the vertex sets of $2$ graphs

The starting point of this question is the fact that for some simple, undirected graphs $G, H$ there is no graph homomorphism $f:G\to H$. This is the case for instance if $\chi(G)>\chi(H)$. ...
12 votes
1 answer
443 views

Is each cover of the plane by lines minimizable?

A cover $\mathcal C$ of a set $X$ by subsets of $X$ is called $\bullet$ minimal if for every $C\in\mathcal C$ the family $\mathcal C\setminus\{C\}$ is not a cover of $X$; $\bullet$ minimizable if $\...
4 votes
3 answers
381 views

Is a simple graph the "sum" of a partial order and its dual?

A "$n$-order matrix" $T\in M_n(\mathbb F_2)$ is a matrix such that there exists a partial ordered relation $\leq_T\subset [1,n]^2$ such that : $T_{ij}=1\Leftrightarrow i\leq_T j$ (where $T_{ij}$ is ...
2 votes
1 answer
104 views

Is a simple graph matrix the sum of a "shiftordered" matrix and its transposed matrix

This is the generalization of a question Is a simple graph the "sum" of a partial order and its dual? Nik Weaver found a counterexample in a very nice, complete (and instantaneous!) answer,...
3 votes
2 answers
138 views

In the context of directed graphs is it standard notation to allow an element of an independent vertex set to be contained in a loop?

Given any relation $R$, that is, any set of ordered pairs, we can associate a unique digraph $D$ to our relation $R$ by setting $D=(\text{fld}(R),R)$ where $\text{fld}(R)=\text{dom}(R)\cup\text{rng}(R)...
4 votes
1 answer
154 views

Kruskal's tree theorem and $\Pi_1$ sentences of linear orderings with finitely many constants

In their paper "Theories with recursive models" [1] Lerman and Schmerl used a version of Kruskal's tree theorem about finite n-augmented trees. An n-augmented tree is a tree T together with $n$ unary ...
1 vote
0 answers
127 views

Ordinal corresponding to well-quasi-order on graphs

Let $K$ be an infinite cardinal. Then, by the Robertson–Seymour theorem, the set of graphs with fewer than $K$ vertices and edges form a well-quasi-order. In terms of $K$, what is the maximal order ...
4 votes
1 answer
153 views

Posets as graphs with the direct neighbor relation

Given any poset $(P,\leq)$ we define the "direct neighbor graph" as follows. Let $$E_P = \big\{\{a,b\}: (a<b \text{ or } a>b) \text{ and } \; ]\min\{a,b\},\max\{a,b\}[ = \emptyset\big\}.$$ It is ...
0 votes
2 answers
62 views

Largest edge set compatible with graph endomorphisms

Let $V$ be a set and let $V^V$ denote the set of all functions $f:V\to V$. Suppose that $F\subseteq V^V$. Let $[V]^2 = \big\{\{x,y\}: x, y\in V \land x\neq y\big\}$. We say $E\subseteq [V]^2$ is $F$-...
4 votes
0 answers
153 views

Maximality with respect to having no marriage

Let $A,B\neq \emptyset$ be disjoint and suppose $G = (A\cup B, E)$ is bipartite where for all $e\in E$ we have $e\cap A \neq \emptyset\neq e\cap B$. For $a\in A$ we set $N_G(a) = \{b\in B: (\exists e\...
17 votes
4 answers
1k views

Subposets of small Dushnik-Miller dimension

The Dushnik–Miller dimension of a partial order $(P,{\leq})$ is the smallest possible size $d$ for a family ${\leq_1},\ldots,{\leq_d}$ of total orderings of $P$ whose intersection is ${\leq}$, i....
-1 votes
1 answer
360 views

Modern books about orders and algebras on trees [closed]

Please help to find books about orders and algebras on trees. If there is no modern books, please advice good old ones! I'm more interested in finite trees (my current problem), but infinite ones are ...
0 votes
0 answers
115 views

Quasi-transitive decomposition of a transitive graph

Let $G=(V,E)$ be a simple digraph that is semi-complete (ie. there's at least one arc between each unordered pair of vertices) and quasi-transitive (ie. its complement is transitive). Is it true that ...
3 votes
1 answer
315 views

Directed Hypercube Minimal Cuts

If $[n]:=\{1,2,\ldots, n\}$ for some $n\in\mathbb{N}$, then the hypercube digraph of dimension $n$, denoted $H_n$, is the graph whose set of vertices is the power-set $\wp([n])$ where two vertices $U,...
2 votes
0 answers
116 views

Isomorphic subcategories of directed graphs and presets

For the purposes of this post, a digraph (directed graph) has neither loops nor multiple parallel edges, and a preset is an ordered pair consisting of a set $S$ and a preorder (viz., a reflexive and ...
3 votes
1 answer
93 views

Minor ordering for finite graphs

Let $\mathcal{G}_{<\omega}$ be the set of graphs $G = (V,E)$ such that $V = \{0,\ldots,n\}$ for some $n \geq 0$ and $E \subseteq \mathcal{P}_2(V) = \{\{a,b\} : a,b \in V \textrm{ and } a\neq b\}$. ...
4 votes
2 answers
317 views

Equality-preserving embeddings of finite trees

For finite trees $T_{1}$ and $T_{2}$ labelled by elements of some infinite set $S$, (we may assume that $S=\mathbb{N}$ without loss of generality), we define an equality-preserving embedding $f$ to be ...
3 votes
3 answers
266 views

Name for "lower/upper bounds" of arbitrary relations?

Given a partial order $R_{\leq}$ over a set $D$, the set of upper bounds under $R$ of a subset $S$ of $D$ is commonly defined as $\{ y \in D | \ \forall x\in S, x R y \}$. (The set of lower bounds of ...
4 votes
1 answer
503 views

For what classes of comparability graphs are their complements also comparability graphs?

An interval graph is an intersection graph of real intervals, that is, an undirected graph whose vertices can be labeled with real intervals so that there is an edge between two vertices iff their ...
1 vote
0 answers
111 views

Set of upper bounds is finite for any finite subset

Is there a term to describe a preordered set $P$ in which any finite subset $S \subset P$ has at most finitely many minimal upper bounds? The preordered sets I'm studying generally aren't join-...
6 votes
1 answer
392 views

Is it possible to decide in polynomial time if a poset is a subposet of another which is given ?

I am reading some theory on partial orders and I wonder something which perhaps has a simple answer : Given two partial orders $G_1,G_2$ (by their hasse diagrams), is it possible to know in polynomial-...
0 votes
0 answers
292 views

Transitive closures and inductive reasoning [solved]

Let's say that r is an endorelation over A (i.e. $r$ is a subset of $A \times A$), $\bar{r}$ is the transitive closure of r (i.e. the least set containing r and being transitive). Furthermore $r$ has ...