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Count and cofactor matroids of highly connected graphs

Dániel Garamvölgyi, Tibor Jordán, Csaba Király

Abstract

We consider two types of matroids defined on the edge set of a graph $G$: count matroids ${\cal M}_{k,\ell}(G)$, in which independence is defined by a sparsity count involving the parameters $k$ and $\ell$, and the (three-dimensional generic) cofactor matroid $\mathcal{C}(G)$, in which independence is defined by linear independence in the cofactor matrix of $G$. We give tight lower bounds, for each pair $(k,\ell)$, that show that if $G$ is sufficiently highly connected, then $G-e$ has maximum rank for all $e\in E(G)$, and ${\cal M}_{k,\ell}(G)$ is connected. These bounds unify and extend several previous results, including theorems of Nash-Williams and Tutte ($k=\ell$), and Lovász and Yemini ($k=2, \ell=3$). We also prove that if $G$ is highly connected, then the vertical connectivity of $\mathcal{C}(G)$ is also high. We use these results to generalize Whitney's celebrated result on the graphic matroid of $G$ (which corresponds to ${\cal M}_{1,1}(G)$) to all count matroids and to the three-dimensional cofactor matroid: if $G$ is highly connected, depending on $k$ and $\ell$, then the count matroid ${\cal M}_{k,\ell}(G)$ uniquely determines $G$; and similarly, if $G$ is $14$-connected, then its cofactor matroid $\mathcal{C}(G)$ uniquely determines $G$. We also derive similar results for the $t$-fold union of the three-dimensional cofactor matroid, and use them to prove that every $24$-connected graph has a spanning tree $T$ for which $G-E(T)$ is $3$-connected, which verifies a case of a conjecture of Kriesell.

Count and cofactor matroids of highly connected graphs

Abstract

We consider two types of matroids defined on the edge set of a graph : count matroids , in which independence is defined by a sparsity count involving the parameters and , and the (three-dimensional generic) cofactor matroid , in which independence is defined by linear independence in the cofactor matrix of . We give tight lower bounds, for each pair , that show that if is sufficiently highly connected, then has maximum rank for all , and is connected. These bounds unify and extend several previous results, including theorems of Nash-Williams and Tutte (), and Lovász and Yemini (). We also prove that if is highly connected, then the vertical connectivity of is also high. We use these results to generalize Whitney's celebrated result on the graphic matroid of (which corresponds to ) to all count matroids and to the three-dimensional cofactor matroid: if is highly connected, depending on and , then the count matroid uniquely determines ; and similarly, if is -connected, then its cofactor matroid uniquely determines . We also derive similar results for the -fold union of the three-dimensional cofactor matroid, and use them to prove that every -connected graph has a spanning tree for which is -connected, which verifies a case of a conjecture of Kriesell.
Paper Structure (13 sections, 31 theorems, 57 equations, 1 figure)

This paper contains 13 sections, 31 theorems, 57 equations, 1 figure.

Key Result

Theorem 2.1

The rank of a set $E' \subseteq E$ of edges in ${\cal M}_{k,\ell}(G)$ is given by where the minimum is taken over all subsets $F\subseteq E'$ and all $1$-thin covers ${\cal X}$ of $(V,E'-F)$. Furthermore, if $0<\ell \leq k,$ then the minimum is attained on a $0$-thin cover of $(V,E'-F)$. If $\ell \leq 0,$ then the minimum is attained on ${\cal X}=\{ V(E'-F) \}$.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: An example of a $5$-connected graph that is not $(2,3)$-rigid.

Theorems & Definitions (63)

  • Theorem 2.1
  • Lemma 2.2
  • Lemma 2.3
  • proof
  • Lemma 2.4
  • proof
  • Theorem 2.5
  • Theorem 2.6
  • proof
  • Lemma 2.7
  • ...and 53 more